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The Department of Justice and FBI today said ongoing investigations have identified more than 1 million botnet crime victims.
The FBI is working with industry partners, including the Computer Emergency Response Team Coordination Center at Carnegie Mellon University, to notify the victim owners of the computers. Microsoft and the Botnet Task Force have also helped out the FBI. Through this process the FBI may uncover additional incidents in which botnets have been used to facilitate other criminal activity, the FBI said in a statement.
The FBI and Justice Department have an ongoing cyber crime initiative to disrupt and dismantle botherders known as Operation Bot Roast. To date, the project has nabbed:
• James C. Brewer of Arlington, Texas, is alleged to have operated a botnet that infected Chicago area hospitals. This botnet infected tens of thousands of computers worldwide.
• Jason Michael Downey of Covington, Ken., is charged with using botnets to send a high volume of traffic to intended recipients to cause damage by impairing the availability of such systems.
• Robert Alan Soloway of Seattle or the Spam King, is alleged to have used a large botnet network and spammed tens of millions of unsolicited email messages to advertise his website from which he offered services and products.
Bots are widely recognized as one of the top scourges of the industry. Gartner predicts that by year-end 75% of enterprises "will be infected with undetected, financially motivated, targeted malware that evaded traditional perimeter and host defenses," and early reports from beta customers of a yet to be released product from Mi5 show how nefarious these infections can be. Mi5 says it installed a Web security beta product at an organization with 12,000 nodes and in one month detected 22 active bots, 123 inactive bots and was watching another 313 suspected bots. That may not sound like a lot, but those bots were responsible for 136 million bot-related incidents, such as scanning for other hosts inside the firewall.
Google researchers recently said at least one in 10 Web pages is booby-trapped with malware. Google's Ghost in the Browser study looked at more than 4.5 million Web pages, and found that 10% of them were capable of activating malicious codes and 16% were suspected to contain codes that might be a threat to computers.
Comments (47)
There's nothing special about the Mac OSBy jdb on November 5, 2007, 5:41 pmIt's just not a big enough target yet. So don't tell too many people about it. Keep it secret, Keep it safe!
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Cyber crime.By Lan Sing on September 10, 2007, 2:28 amLan Sing I am a serious victim of cyber crime, and I believe of a cell network/organized crime. The technology part of it alerts the criminals and then I am terrorized,...
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Running Antiviral Software? Why bother?By topdocjim on July 17, 2007, 2:09 pm Why don't these reporters simply observe that this is not a problem with Macs? It is just another easily exploitable security hole in Windows operating systems...
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"When you buy an officialBy Anonymous on July 17, 2007, 12:43 pm"When you buy an official Windows CDROM from Microsoft or a CDROM from Adobe, you know that their CDROM is not infected with viruses." No you don't.
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LAN sniffing for Bot Nets?By Anonymous on July 11, 2007, 4:27 pmIs there anything in particular that one should look for with a LAN Sniffer like Wireshark that would indicate there is a botnet in operation on a LAN?
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