Paul Wood, MessageLabs intelligence senior analyst, Symantec, said in a statement spammers are combining three more established spam techniques--Captcha-breaking, social networking spam and using Web mail--in an attempt to fool spam filters.
Spam levels of economies in the Asia-Pacific region (%) | |
Hong Kong | 92.3 |
China | 91.1 |
Malaysia | 89 |
Vietnam | 88.7 |
Singapore | 88.4 |
The Philippines | 88.3 |
India | 88 |
Indonesia | 87.1 |
Total | 91.4 |
The use of Web mail also shows that cybercriminals are using more reputable Web sites which are less likely to get blocked, debunking a "common misconception that [spammers] are more likely to use less-reputable Web sites...to hide malware," noted MessageLabs.
The antispam company said the number of new sites hosting malware was slashed from 3,561 in April to 1,149 in May, showing that more established-domains were being used to host malicious content. Furthermore, a huge 84.6 percent of domains blocked for hosting malware had been established for over a year.
Wood explained that newer domains tend to get flagged as suspicious because they are typically temporary sites set up just to host spam and malware, and also get shut down faster. Trustworthy older domains can be compromised through SQL injection attacks, he said.
The trend of abusing trust also extends to the proliferation of social networking spam, said Wood. Social networking sites pose a number of varying threats to users, from the availability of personal data on these sites increasing the likelihood of phishing, to the higher chances of users clicking on spam links because they trust friends who "send" it to them.
According to MessageLab, the month of May saw the global ratio of spam rise by 5.1 percent over April to hit 90.4 percent. Hong Kong was the most-spammed economy at 92.3 percent.