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Malicious attacks on the rise: Kaspersky

In 2014, Kaspersky observed a considerable growth in the number of malicious attacks on user computers and mobile devices

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Sanghamitra Kar
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BANGALORE, INDIA: In 2014, Kaspersky observed a considerable growth in the number of malicious attacks on user computers and mobile devices, further development of financial malware and a change in the vectors of web attacks.

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In 2013, most web attacks were carried out using malicious web resources located in the USA and Russia while in 2014 Germany hosted more malicious sites than everywhere except the USA. The Netherlands remained in 3rd place.

2014 figures

  • 38% of user computers were subjected to at least one web attack over the year.
  • 44% of web attacks neutralized by Kaspersky Lab products were carried out using malicious web resources located in the US (27.5% of all attacks) and Germany (16.6%). The Netherlands (13.4%) came 3rd.
  • Attempts to steal money via online access to bank accounts were blocked on almost 2,000,000 user computers.
  • Kaspersky Lab products protected their users from an average of 3.9 million Internet-based attacks a day.
  • Kaspersky Lab's web antivirus detected over 123,000,000 unique malicious objects: 74% of them were found at malicious URLs.
  • A total of 3.7 million attempts to infect OS X- based computers were blocked by Kaspersky Lab products
  • An average Mac user encountered 9 threats during the year
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Mobile threats

  • 295,500 new mobile malicious programs, 2.8 times as many as in 2013
  • 12,100 mobile banking Trojans, 9 times as many as last year.
  • 53% of attacks involved mobile Trojans targeting users’ money (SMS-Trojans, banking Trojans)
  • 19% of Android users (one in five) encountered a mobile threat at least once over the year.
  • Mobile malware attacks were registered in more than 200 countries worldwide

Financial threats

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The fraudsters who specialize in mobile financial malware are probably inspired by their experienced “colleagues” who have been stealing money via personal computers for years. Zeus remains the most widespread banking Trojan with ChePro and Lohmys coming second and third.

Three quarters of attacks targeting users’ money were carried out using banking malware but these are not the only financial threats. Bitcoin wallet theft was the second most popular banking threat (14%). Bitcoin mining software (10%) is another threat related to the crypto currency. It uses computing resources to generate bitcoins.

Maria Garnaeva, security expert at Kaspersky Lab’s Global Research and Analysis Team, said: “One of the most effective ways to deliver malware to user computers is to exploit vulnerabilities in Oracle Java and in browsers such as Explorer, Mozilla Firefox, etc. In addition, cybercriminals continue to use exploits for Adobe Reader vulnerabilities. These infection techniques remain popular simply because social engineering techniques are still effective."

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