Web is Dangerous says Google
Here we make an attempt to find you answers to all your questions. If you
have any questions or suggestions, please send your mail or feedback to
webmaster@healthmantra.com
========================================================
The search engine giant trained its Web crawling software on billions of Web
addresses over the past year looking for malicious pages that tried to attack
their visitors. They found more than 3 million of them, meaning that about one
in 1,000 Web pages is malicious, according to Neils Provos, a senior staff
software engineer with Google.
These Web-based attacks, called "drive-by downloads" by security experts,
have become much more common in recent years as firewalls and better security
practices by
Microsoft have made it harder for worms and viruses to directly attack
computers.
In the past year the Web sites of
Al Gore's "An
Inconvenient Truth" movie and the
Miami Dolphins were hacked, and the MySpace profile of Alicia Keys was
used to attack visitors.
Criminals are getting better at this kind of work. They have built very
successful automated tools that poke and prod Web sites, looking for programming
errors and then exploit these flaws to install the drive-by download software.
Often this code opens an invisible iFrame page on the victim's browser that
redirects it to a malicious Web server. That server then tries to install code
on the victim's PC. "The bad guys are getting exceptionally good at automating
those attacks," said Roger Thompson, chief research officer with security vendor
Grisoft.
In response, Google has stepped up its game. One of the reasons it has been
scouring the Web for malicious pages is so that it can identify
drive-by-download sites and warn Google searchers before they visit them.
Nowadays about 1.3 percent of all
Google search queries list malicious results somewhere on the first few
pages.
Some of the data surprised Provos.
"When we started going into this I had the firm intuition that if you go to
the sleazier parts of the Web, you are in more danger," he said.
It turns out the Web's nice neighborhoods aren't necessarily safer than its
red-light districts.
"We looked into this and indeed we found that if you ended up going to
adult-oriented pages, your risk of being exposed [to malicious software] was
slightly higher," he said. But "there really wasn't a huge difference."
"Staying away from the disreputable part of the Internet really isn't good
enough," he noted.
Another interesting finding:
China was far and away the greatest source of malicious Web sites.
According to Google's research, 67 percent of all malware distribution sites are
hosted in China. The second-worst offender? The U.S., at 15 percent, followed by
Russia, (4 percent)
Malaysia (2.2 percent) and Korea (2 percent).
It costs next-to-nothing to register a Web domain in China and service
providers are often slow to shut down malicious pages, said Thompson. "They're
the Kleenex Web sites," he said. Criminals "know they're going to be shut down,
and they don't care."
Malicious site operators in China fall into two broad categories, Thompson
said: fraudsters looking to steal your banking password, and teenagers who want
to steal your World of Warcraft character.
So how to stop this growing pestilence?
Google's Provos has this advice for Web surfers: Turn automatic updates on.
"You should always run your software as updated as possible and install some
kind of antivirus technology," he said.
But he also thinks that Webmasters will have to get smarter about building
secure Web sites. "I think it will take concentrated efforts on all parts," for
the problem to go away, he said

©2008-2013, Healthmantra.com. All Rights Reserved.
|