Spam and VirusesBot Wars: The Spam Bots Strike BackBy Todd Wasserman
Email is an indispensable tool for most organizations, but it's also the source of more and more headaches for CIOs as spammers continue to up the ante with new technologies. Analysts who study email and spam agree there's nothing that can be done to block 100% of all spam. Instead, spam might be likened to diabetes, a chronic condition that can be managed but not eradicated. However, spam is not only dangerous because it can result in the transmission of viruses, worms and other threats, but it also diverts essential computing power. And the advent of new types of spam -- including image spam and botnet spam -- is now slowing down the Internet connections upon which organizations have come to rely. "We're continuing to hear that around 90 to 95% of email is spam and the spammers are using a bunch of new techniques to break in," says Arabella Hallawell, a vice president of research for Gartner. "It's really slowing connections and eating up a lot of bandwidth." New flavors of spam The other major email threat is image spam, which was devised to foil filters looking for specific spam keywords. But when such text is presented in a JPEG or PDF format, such text-seeking filters are rendered useless. One way to battle image spam has been to look for "signatures" like a certain color scheme, but spammers have gotten wise to that tactic and have created "snowflake spam," in which every image is unique, at least from a spam filter's viewpoint. Thanks to its ability to confound filters, image spam has grown in popularity. Some firms estimate that up to 30% of all spam today is image spam. Ways to limit image spam and botnets
Whatever method of fighting the new strains of spam that a CIO decides is best for the organization, analysts note that it is important to address the threats now. "The sheer magnitude of what botnets can do is frightening," Lambert says. "They are often the source of a big phishing or spam attack." Todd Wasserman has more than 15 years' experience writing for The New York Times, The Industry Standard and Business 2.0, among other publications. He is currently news editor for Brandweek magazine. |
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"We're continuing to hear that around 90 to 95% of email is spam and the spammers are using a bunch of new techniques to break in." -- Arabella Hallawell a vice president of research at Gartner Podcast Audio ContentCIO Strategy Center is now available in audio format. This week's feature topic is: Preparing for a DisasterPlaytime: 8 min 07 sec |