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Spam surge emanating from the Far East
Made in China...
By Victoria Ho
Published: Tuesday 14 August 2007
There has been a significant rise in the amount of spam originating from Chinese domains, according to the latest statistics from security vendor Symantec.
In a report, Symantec noted a sharp spike in spam messages containing URLs that use dot-cn, the top-level domain (TLD) for China. During the month of July, the number of spam domains rose from virtually zero to around 450.
One reason for the growing popularity of Chinese domains is the ban on TLDs from other countries on spam blacklists, according to Symantec. Spammers are thus forced to register new TLDs from countries not yet on the blacklists.
Spam is also becoming increasingly localised for specific target markets, said Symantec.
The security vendor also noted a drop in spam using Hong Kong (dot-hk) TLDs, which could be a result of the recent enactment of anti-spam laws in the country.
Symantec's report also noted a decline in image spam. Some 10 per cent of all spam messages in July were image-based, compared to about 50 per cent earlier this year.
However, the decline in image spam is giving rise to attachments in other forms. Greetings-card spam topped the list.
More than 250 million greetings-card spam messages were sent, each containing links to Trojans which get downloaded when clicked.
Other forms of spam on the rise include PDF spam, Excel and ZIP-file spam. Although Excel and ZIP-file spam numbers remain low, Symantec's report stated that finding new attachment formats is an indication of "just how committed spammers are to evading anti-spam filters".
Victoria Ho writes for ZDNet Asia
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