You might as well not bothering powerinf up that Windows PC 0f yours on Monday 24 November as that day is set to see a peak of malware.
IT security company PC Tools said that after analysing information on more than 500,000 computers worldwide and comparing data from the same period in 2007 it found that the worst day for worms and trojans was the Monday before Thanksgiving in the US. The company said was because of the increased online activity at this time of the year before Christmas and on the day after Thanksgiving, when many US shops start their sales.
It said that cyber-criminals will try to trick users into downloading malicious software to access banking login details and passwords for online shopping sites. Online shopping continues to grow in popularity, with Internet sales in the UK set to hit £13.16bn this year - despite the credit crunch and various countries going into recession.
More people are expected to use the web for their shopping as a way of finding lower prices to help them beat the credit crunch.
But while security experts are expecting the traditional increase of malware over November and December, they have also warned of another source of potential attacks. Spammers and criminals have attempted to use the popularity of American president-elect Barack Obama as a way to trick users into downloading malware.
A flood of emails purporting to link to a video of Obama's acceptance speech were actually connected to a trojan horse program which would compromise the target's PC. Meanwhile, a separate burst of spam messages contained a file called BarackObama.exe, which, when activated, places a rootkit on the victim's machine and opens it up to hackers around the world.
oo like that huh? thanks!
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