Fake Security Software Steals $34 Million Monthly
Cybercriminals are making a fortune by preying on gullible computer users.
By
Thomas
Claburn,
InformationWeek
July 29, 2009
URL:
http://www.informationweek.com/story/showArticle.jhtml?articleID=218800178
Ignorance may be bliss, but it can also be expensive. Insufficiently knowledgeable computer users are downloading and paying for fake security software in increasing numbers, creating massive revenue for cybercriminals.
"More and more people are acclimating to the Internet and they feel
they can make these important security decisions," said Sean-Paul
Correll, security evangelist and threat researcher for Panda Security. "They don't feel the need to call their tech-savvy grandson."
Fake security software, also known as "rogueware," is a form of malware that attempts to convince people that their computers are infected with malware.
Following the exploitation of a vulnerability
or a visit to a malicious Web site, rogueware will weasel its way onto
a computer and then purport to find malware on the system in question.
It will offer to remediate the problem once the victim enters a credit
card number to pay for the "security software." But payment typically
does not cure the infection.
"Cyber-criminals no longer need to steal users' information in
order to make their money; instead, they simply need to find ways to
get users to part with their cash voluntarily," says a report released
by Panda Security on Wednesday.
According to Panda, the rogueware business took off in 2008 and
has continued to surge. At the end of 2008, the company said that it
had detected almost 55,000 rogueware samples. By the end of Q3 this
year, Panda expects to identify more than 637,000 new rogueware
samples, an increase of more than tenfold in less than a year.
Rogueware cybercriminals spread their fake software through
social media by manipulating search engines to get their links to the
top of search
results lists, by inserting links into comments on Digg.com, by
tweeting their links on Twitter, and by exploiting vulnerabilities in blog software and on Facebook.
Panda estimates that 35 million computers are infected by rogueware
every month, affecting perhaps half that number of actual users.
Such large numbers, Panda claims, lead to substantial revenue.
The company estimates that cybercriminals are earning about $34 million
per month from rogueware, which typically sells for between $49.95 and
$79.95.
"They're making an insane amount of money," insists Correll.
This claim isn't merely speculation. According to Correll, a hacker known by the name "NeoN" infiltrated rogueware manufacturer Bakasoftware in September 2008 by exploiting an SQL
vulnerability on the group's Web site. NeoN copied a spreadsheet of
payments to Baka's affiliates. The numbers show that the malware
group's top affiliate earned $81,388.61 in a period of only six days.
"That's almost $5,000,000 per year and it's an astronomical number
considering that this projection is just for one of many affiliates in
Baka's roster, not to mention that the rogueware business has grown
about four times the size it was in 2008 (in terms of sample volume),"
Panda's report states.
Posted on
Wednesday, July 29, 2009
by Jack Benton
filed under