In the first six months of this year, the U.S. was back on the list of the top 10 spam senders worldwide, landing in sixth place.
The distribution of unwelcome or dangerous emails was on the rise again in the first half of 2012, despite the fact that numerous spam-sending botnets have been shut down in the past two years, according to the results of analyses by the research team at German email security specialist Eleven.
The study showed there was 54.8 percent more spam (after dipping 3.7 percent in the first quarter), 52.4 percent more identified malware and 90 percent more virus outbreaks in the second quarter of 2012.
Another key trend of the first half of 2012 was the rise in spam, phishing and malware campaigns targeted to a specific country, customers of a regional banking institution or the users of specific services, such as with Amazon’s German site or PayPal users, with malware campaigns disguised as phony mobile telephone bills, notification slips and tax notifications. Typical characteristics were a clearly limited recipient area, credible content, high language quality and Websites that are almost perfect copies of the originals.
In June, it reached fifth, alongside Germany (third) and the United Kingdom (eighth), one of three Western countries placing among the top 10 sources of spam, with India remaining the top spam-producing country. This indicates a remarkable comeback after the Rustock botnet was shut down in March 2011, when the volume of spam coming from Western countries was reduced to a trickle.
“The clear shift in spam topics and countries of origin indicates a gradual return to the pre-Rustock shutdown status quo,” the report noted. “This means that botnet operators have been at least partially successful in replacing the capacity they lost last March. The increase in the spam volume could also be evidence of the existence of new botnet infrastructures.”
News 9 months ago

