Five botnets responsible for 75% of spam sent


Each infected machine sends spam at rate of almost two messages per second.

Spam levels have increased 60% since the beginning of this year, according to security company

Marshal8e6

in its latest Security Threats report. The increase means that spam levels are now back at where they were mid-2008, prior to the

closure

of the infamous

McColo

ISP.

In the report,

Marshal8e6

also looks at the sources of spam, most of which is still sent via botnets made up of compromised computers. Just five botnets are responsible for around 75% of the spam sent, with the Rustock botnet alone being responsible for 45%. The Rustock botnet uses sophisticated techniques both to hide itself on the infected machine and to make the emails it sends looks legitimate: it uses HTML templates of genuine newsletters in which it inserts its own links and images, thus tricking both users and spam filters into believing the email is genuine.

The majority of spam still advertises pharmaceutical products, with Tamiflu and Acai Berry becoming prominent alongside Viagra and Cialis. The confidence of spammers in the stock markets seems to have decreased with the credit crunch, as only 0.1% of all spam messages are now pump-and-dump emails. The amount of spam containing malicious attachments is small compared to values seen in mid-2008, but still reaches peaks of 3% when botnets are running new malicious campaigns.

In the meantime, researchers at

ESET

looked at the relatively small Waledac botnet, which consists of at least 20,000 infected computers. They discovered that an infected machine is capable of sending more than 6,500 spam emails per hour – which is almost two per second. This gives this botnet a theoretical capacity of three billion spam emails per day; a number that is probably never reached, because not all infected machines will be online continuously.

The full

Marshal8e6

Security Threats report can be downloaded

here

(PDF), while

ESET

‘s research is explained in a blog post

here

.

Posted on 16 July 2009 by

Virus Bulletin


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