Spam falls back from December's
high.
SoftScan announced today that spam levels have dropped back
marginally from their December high to account for 96.8% of all email
scanned during January. Although some of the reduction is undoubtedly
due to bet infected machines being replaced with new, "clean"
computers at Christmas, SoftScan does not believe that the remaining
drop is significant, more a lull before the next surge of spam.
"There is nothing to indicate that this reduction in spamming
activity is long term,' says SoftScan. "Either the spammers
are content with the data they have collected so far and don't see
the need for sending large waves of spam or they are busy working on new
tactics. Although we don't expect to see a return to
December's levels just yet, I'm sure it will only be a matter
of months." Last month saw the highest rate of spam to date when
over 97.02% of email was classified by SoftScan as spam. December was
marked by very high levels of spam during weekdays, which has noticeable
dropped during January. However, with Valentine's day falling on a
Thursday this month, SoftScan expect to see a marked increase in
spamming and possible virus activity into the run up of this widely
celebrated date.
By comparison virus levels remained very low in January accounting
for just 0.11% of all email scanned. The top five virus families in
January 08 were:
1--phishing: 84.88%
2--dropper: 7.02%
3--agent: 1.39%
4--trojan-small: 1.24%
5--netsky: 0.86%
www.softscan.com
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