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Top ten threats from Sunbelt.


Sunbelt Software Founded in 1984 Sunbelt Software is a software company based out of Clearwater, Florida and provider of enterprise system infrastructure software, including anti-spyware, security, anti-spam and system management tools.  have released the top ten most prevalent malware (MALicious softWARE) Software designed to destroy, aggravate and otherwise make life unhappy. See crimeware, virus, worm, logic bomb, macro virus and Trojan.  threats for the month of August 2009. The report, compiled from monthly scans performed by Sanbelt's award-winning antispyware tool, CounterSpy[TM], and its anti-malware solution, VIPRE[R]Antivirus + Antispyware[TM], is a service of SunbeltLabs[TM].

For August, SunbeltLabs reports that password-stealing Trojan threat TrojanSpy. Win32.Zbot.gen maintained the top spot on the list, but its prevalence increased by 53.7% month over month, to 7.67 percent of overall Sunbelt detections from 4.99 percent in July.

Also in August, Trojan. Win32.Generic!BT which wasn't on the list in July streaked to the second highest spot on the list with 7.57 percent of detections.

Trojan. Win32.Generic!BT is a downloader associated with rogue security programs (also called "scareware"). Once downloaded, the rogues pretend to scan a victim's computer for malware then display false warnings that the machine is infected in·fect  
tr.v. in·fect·ed, in·fect·ing, in·fects
1. To contaminate with a pathogenic microorganism or agent.

2. To communicate a pathogen or disease to.

3. To invade and produce infection in.
. It tries to convince victims to purchase useless security software.

"The fact that Zbot is the top detection for the last two months isn't surprising. It's a very versatile piece of malcode that injects code from a remote site to steal information from its victims, including cached passwords, login Signing in and gaining access to a network server, Web server or other computer system. The process (the noun) is a "login" or "logon," while the act of doing it (the verb) is to "log in" or to "log on.  credentials for web sites (chiefly banks) as well as data in certificates and cookies. It has some backdoor See trapdoor.  functionality and may record keystrokes," said Sunbelt Software Vice President of Threat Research and Technologies Michael St. Neitzel. "We first noticed an increased distribution of it in the middle of May when it was distributed through a number of spam E-mail that is not requested. Also known as "unsolicited commercial e-mail" (UCE), "unsolicited bulk e-mail" (UBE), "gray mail" and just plain "junk mail," the term is both a noun (the e-mail message) and a verb (to send it).  campaigns. In one case, the spurn email purported pur·port·ed  
adj.
Assumed to be such; supposed: the purported author of the story.



pur·ported·ly adv.
 to be an airline e-ticket and in others it arrived as either an attachment that claimed to be from United Parcel or an alleged e-payment notification of an order with Amazon.com. We have documented more than 2,700 files related to TrojanSpy.Win32.Zbot.gen since it was first detected." Trojan. Win32.Tdss.aalc (v) fell from second on the list in July to third in August with 3.62 percent, even though that was a higher percentage of detections than in July, when it was 2.92 percent. Interestingly, the Win32.induc virus, which was highly publicised Adj. 1. publicised - made known; especially made widely known
publicized
 in August for propagating itself through Delphi development applications, did not make the list.

The top ten results represent the number of times a particular malware infection was detected during CounterSpy and VIPRE scans that report back to Sunbelt's community of opt-in users. The top ten most prevalent spyware Software that sends information about your Web surfing habits to its Web site. Often quickly installed in your computer in combination with a free download you selected from the Web, spyware transmits information in the background as you move around the Web.  threats for the month of August are:
1. Trojan-Spy.Win32.Zbot.gen             7.67%
2. Trojan.Win32.Generic! BT              7.57%
3. Trojan.Win32.Tdss.aalc (v)            3.62%
4. BehavesLike.Win32.Malware (v)         3.11%
5. FraudTool.Win32.Antivirus2010 (v)     2.72%
6. Explorer32.Hijacker                   2.53%
7. Trojan-Downloader. braviax            2.38%
8. Trojan.DNSChanger. Gen                2.24%
9. Exploit.PDF-JS.Gen (v)                2.23%
10. Trojan-Downloader.Zlob.Media-Codec   2.18%

www.sunbeltsecurity.com.
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Title Annotation:Security News and Products
Publication:Database and Network Journal
Date:Oct 1, 2009
Words:492
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