Viruses, spam and malicious Internet scams transmitted by e-mail all grew sharply in 2002, posing a threat to the smooth running of worldwide e-mail systems, according to security vendor MessageLabs.
The problem of spam, or unsolicited e-mail, has become so bad that the number of spam e-mails being received will exceed the number of legitimate e-mails next year, MessageLabs said in a statement Wednesday.
In its review of e-mail threats in 2002, MessageLabs reported that:
— Spam now accounts for 30 per cent of all e-mail and is set to rise above 50 per cent in July next year.
— One virus was sent for each 212 e-mails in 2002, compared with one virus per 380 e-mails in 2001. This upward trend is expected to continue.
— Technical sophistication of viruses continues to increase, exposing weaknesses in traditional anti-virus software.
— Blended threats, where spam e-mails are combined with viruses, showed sharp growth in 2002.
— Trojans, or attacks targeted at companies and individuals, rose sharply in 2002.
— Malicious scams, such as the Nigerian e-mail advance fee scam are continuing to proliferate and prosper. The Nigerian advance fee, or 419, scam is expected to gross $US2 billion in 2003, making it that country's second-largest industry.
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