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Viruses on rise, but are companies liable?


Computer viruses designed to steal victims' personal and financial information--names, addresses, and credit card numbers--are becoming increasingly widespread on the Internet, according to according to
prep.
1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians.

2. In keeping with: according to instructions.

3.
 an Internet-security trends report by security software maker Symantec Corp. Unfortunately, companies are trying to limit their liability when such online security breaches hijack customer data.

Symantec's study of the 10 most prevalent viruses during the last six months of 2003 shows a 519-percent increase in the volume of virus-laden messages that constituted threats to user privacy and confidentiality compared with the first six months of the year. These infectious programs sought either to expose documents or to filch filch  
tr.v. filched, filch·ing, filch·es
To take (something, especially something of little value) in a furtive manner; snitch. See Synonyms at steal.



[Middle English filchen.
 data like passwords and financial account information, often using programs for logging users' keystrokes and sending the data back to virus authors. There was also a definite increase in viruses and worms that open backdoors to provide hackers with entry into victim PCs at a later date. Backdoors allow hackers to download any program they choose, including those that steal personal information, to turn the PCs into spam relay Sending mail to a destination via a third-party mail server or proxy server in order to hide the address of the source of the mail. When e-mail servers (SMTP servers) are used, it is known as an "open relay" or "SMTP relay," and this method was commonly used by spammers in the past when  points, or create foot soldiers to carry out other Internet attacks.

Symantec said it is unclear as to what degree businesses and consumers are being victimized by these malicious viruses or how much damage is being done. Half the companies analyzed by Symantec experienced a serious security breach in the second half of 2003, up significantly from one-sixth in the first half, due mainly to the period's hugely successful viruses and worms. Six of the top-10 attack types Symantec saw, including viruses, worms, and targeted attacks, exploited flaws in Web applications, which are attractive targets because traditional firewalls block traffic in certain applications but allow most Web traffic.

When it came to severe, targeted hacker A person who writes programs in assembly language or in system-level languages, such as C. The term often refers to any programmer, but its true meaning is someone with a strong technical background who is "hacking away" at the bits and bytes.  attacks on corporations, financial services The examples and perspective in this article or section may not represent a worldwide view of the subject.
Please [ improve this article] or discuss the issue on the talk page.
, healthcare, and power and energy companies topped the list of the hardest-hit. The financial services industry experienced 7.8 severe attacks per every 10,000 security events, compared with 1.9 sustained by the 10thranked telecommunications industry. Most of these attacks--58 percent--appeared to originate from the United States United States, officially United States of America, republic (2005 est. pop. 295,734,000), 3,539,227 sq mi (9,166,598 sq km), North America. The United States is the world's third largest country in population and the fourth largest country in area. .

In the face of these ongoing hacker attacks, some companies that store customers' personal data are adopting a new defensive tactic: They are writing policies specifying that they are not legally responsible if a customer's information is stolen. Internet retailers and other service providers that handle consumer transactions, including Verizon Wireless Cellco Partnership, doing business as Verizon Wireless, owns and operates the second largest wireless telecommunications network in the United States, based on total wireless customers.  and American Airlines American Airlines

Major U.S. airline. American was created through a merger of several smaller U.S. airlines and incorporated in 1934. It continued to buy the routes of other airlines, becoming an international carrier in the 1970s; its routes include South America, the
, are now requiring customers to agree to waive any right to sue the companies if the businesses are hacked, regardless of how secure their systems are. However, the waivers are often contained in lengthy online terms-of-use agreements that consumers often click to accept without reading closely.

Companies say that despite their best efforts, they cannot guarantee that personal data will be secure and do not want to get sued over intrusions that are out of their control. According to media reports, firms also fear the Federal Trade Commission (FTC FTC

See Federal Trade Commission (FTC).
), which has actively pursued cases in which companies have failed to live up to security assurances made to customers.

The FTC has brought three high-profile cases against companies for making security commitments they failed to meet. In one case, Eli Lilly Eli Lilly can refer to:
  • Eli Lilly and Company, a global pharmaceutical company
  • Colonel Eli Lilly (1839-1898), founder of Eli Lilly and Company
  • Eli Lilly (industrialist) (1885-1977), former president of Eli Lilly and Company
 & Co. was fined and forced to enter into a 20-year consent decree A settlement of a lawsuit or criminal case in which a person or company agrees to take specific actions without admitting fault or guilt for the situation that led to the lawsuit.

A consent decree is a settlement that is contained in a court order.
 with the FTC after it inadvertently exposed the e-mail addresses See Internet address.

e-mail address - electronic mail address
 of hundreds of Prozac users.

According to The Washington Post, organizations such as retailers, banks, credit card firms, universities, and state agencies, with extensive databases of customers' credit card and Social Security numbers or other identifying information, are prime targets. And liability for network attacks is an area with little legal precedent, according to experts.

Most online businesses, the Post said, encrypt or scramble information that passes back and forth between a consumer's and the company's computers when transactions are executed. But companies often do not encrypt the data that they store because that is expensive, relying instead on defending their systems against hackers breaking through in the first place. Others use third parties to store their data. To alleviate concern, some companies, such as Hewlett-Packard Co., store only basic customer data not credit card numbers--to minimize risk.
Where do hacker
attacks originate?

United States   58%
Canada           8%
China            3%
Japan            3%
Australia        3%

Source: Symantec Corp.
COPYRIGHT 2004 Association of Records Managers & Administrators (ARMA)
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2004, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Title Annotation:computer viruses
Author:Swartz, Nikki
Publication:Information Management Journal
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:May 1, 2004
Words:702
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