- HP buys EDS for $13.9 billion
- What EDS is telling its people about HP deal
- 10 ways the Chinese Internet is different
- Clock is ticking on .me domain names
- Philly's Wi-Fi net to be shut down
Hacker writes Cisco rootkit; Microsoft launches online telescope. Listen now!
Wireless dangers at airports. Listen now!
Discover how Wait-Time Analysis, a new approach to application and database performance optimization, allows IT professionals to fine-tune applications based on service levels. With this management tool you will find all root causes of problems impacting customers and identify the resources that will resolve that problem. Learn more today.
Get the latest on storage technologies that allow IT professionals to better cope with new IT demands. Learn how storage technologies can help you successfully tackle e-Discover, regulatory compliance, green data center initiatives and the data explosion. Get all the details now.
Find out how you can consolidate Windows workloads and create a more efficient virtualized data center in this informative webcast, "Reduce Complexity and Cost - Windows Server Consolidation with Virtualization." Six concise webcast modules are available for your viewing. Watch them all consecutively or only the topics that interest you. The modules cover performance, user case studies, enterprise-level support, managing windows workloads, setup and configuration and the future of virtualization. Learn more today. Register below to learn more and be entered to win an Archos 605 Portable Media Player.
Juniper has this in WX/WXC, BlueCoat now has this (acquired with the Packeteer acquisition.) Both companies...- Anonymous
Spam originating from Google's Gmail domain doubled last month, indicating that spammers are still defeating the CAPTCHA, the distorted text used as a security test to thwart mass registration of e-mail accounts and other Web site abuse.
Gmail spam went from 1.3% of all spam e-mail to 2.6 percent in February, according to data released by e-mail security vendor MessageLabs on Monday.
The new statistics are another nail in the coffin for CAPTCHA, which stands for Completely Automated Public Turing test to tell Computers and Humans Apart.
Google is the latest free Web mail provider to be victimized by spammers' efforts to create software to solve the codes, or at times, also employ people to solve the codes en masse.
"It's only a matter of time before [CAPTCHAs] are comprehensively defeated," said Paul Wood, senior analyst at MessageLabs.
Last month, security vendor Websense ascertained that spammers were using two hosts to crack Gmail's CAPTCHAs. The method appeared to be successful only 20% of the time. But if the procedure is repeated thousands of times, many new accounts can be generated and used to send spam.
Most of the messages use links and images to advertise adult entertainment sites, Wood said.
While other spammy domains can simply be blocked by antispam software, businesses are reluctant to cut off the domains of free Web mail providers because of their legitimate use, he said. Spam from Web mail providers comprises 4.2% of all spam.
Google's CAPTCHA system is considered hard to crack, but so was Yahoo's, which is also regularly beaten. MessageLabs said 88.7 percent of the spam from free Web mail providers comes from Yahoo's domains.
Microsoft's CAPTCHA, used for registering accounts on its Windows Live Mail service, has also been cracked. Websense believes the same group of spammers are responsible for breaking both Google and Microsoft's system.
Wood said MessageLabs provides Google as well as other companies with data that helps fight spam. Google could not be reached for comment.
MessageLabs sells a security service to companies, filtering e-mail before passing it to their 17,000 customers. Per day, the company snags 2.5 billion spam messages from a total of more than 3 billion messages.