A local security software maker has issued a warning about
malicious code attacks over instant messaging networks.
Akonix Systems Inc. said it tracked 10 new malicious code attacks
over IM networks in May, raising the total count of malicious worms to
73 through May 31.
The research was conducted by Akonix and its industry colleagues in
IM infrastructure and security schemes: Sophos and Secunia.
Although the number of identified worms is down from last year, the
sophistication has increased, said Don Montgomery, vice president of
marketing. He said just one rapidly propagating Trojan or worm could
take down a business network.
"Organizations hoping to improve productivity from IM and
unified communications need to get effective security tools in place
immediately," said Montgomery.
But not everyone is equally alarmed about IM threats.
A representative from competitor Symantec Corp., an Internet
security firm, said IM appears to be losing favor among malicious code
authors, who are shifting their efforts to Web sites where their viruses
and worms can be more lucrative.
Peter Firstbrook, an analyst at Gartner Inc., a technology research
and advisory firm, says IM threats simply didn't materialize the
way many experts initially predicted. He said the largest threat these
days is sending e-mails to lure victims to a Web site containing
malware.
"You have to protect your Web gateway and that will protect
your IM servers as well," Firstbrook said.
The cost for protection is worth the possible cost of loss due to
worms, viruses and other malware. He said these types of threats are
becoming more sophisticated, more prolific and more malicious--often
aiming to steal passwords, credentials and critical information.
"The cost of a malware infection is actually going up because
malware is more malicious in intent these days," Firstbrook said.
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