Infosec Europe 2008
Infosec Europe 2008
R E L A T E D   C O N T E N T

Free email newsletters




ADVERTISEMENT

Infosec: Most breaches down to lost or stolen kit

Hacking fades in favour of theft

Iain Thomson at Infosec Europe 2008, vnunet.com 22 Apr 2008
ADVERTISEMENT

Microsoft's latest security report has shown that breaches from hacking attacks are plummeting, while lost equipment now accounts for over half of all security problems.

Lost or stolen hardware was responsible for 58 per cent of all data security breaches in the last six months of 2007.

This compares with just 13 per cent as a result of hacking, down from an average of 23 per cent for previous years.

"We all have smartphones and laptops and it is losing these that is a major problem," said Vinny Gullotto, general manager for Microsoft's Malware Protection Agency.

"If you think about what is often kept on these devices, losing it in public is a major problem."

The data comes from Microsoft users around the world and is analysed by Microsoft malware labs.

The information has allowed the company to create a threat map of the world, showing on average how many computers need to be scanned to find one piece of malware.

Japan was found to be the safest area, with over 500 computer searches per piece of malware. Spain fared worst in Europe, and the Middle East, Mexico and Brazil had the most problems with malicious code.

"Look at Japan," said Gullotto. "It is one of the most connected sites in the world but it is pretty safe over there. They are taking care of things."

One in 144 of the seven million computers scanned in the UK had unwanted malicious software, comparing favourably to one in 112 in the US and one in 123 worldwide. In Japan the figure was one in 685.

The UK is unusual in that none of the top five malware infections in the past year was a virus, but the country saw a huge spike in the number of Trojan downloaders.

This is because the Trojans are after financial data for profit, rather than kudos.

See also:

Infosec Europe 2008Police cannot do everything, says Microsoft UK security chief  22 Apr 2008
Infosec Europe 2008Employee web filtering gets weird  22 Apr 2008
Infosec Europe 2008The latest news and views from Europe's number one information security event  01 May 2008

All Hacking
Tags: Infosec, Security

Like this story? Spread the news by clicking below:

Post this to Delicious del.icio.us    Post this to Digg Digg this    Post this to reddit reddit!

Permalink for this story
R E A D E R   C O M M E N T S

M A R K E T P L A C E
Sponsored links
F E A T U R E D   J O B S
Guildford, Surrey, United Kingdom | Enstar
 IT Development Manager/IT Development Project manager - Guildford - £40k - £60k plus benefits   Enstar (EU) Limited (formerly Castlewood (EU) Limited) is seeking an IT Development Project Manager and an IT Development Manager to ... more >
United Kingdom | Nottingham University NHS
Analyst/Developer - Nottingham University NHS - £24,103 - £32,653   An analyst/developer is required within the Systems Development Section of Nottingham University Hospitals ICT Services. The successful applicants will be part of a team whose ... more >
Hook, Hampshire, United Kingdom | EDS
Description: This vacancy is for an information security consultant to join EDS' Information Assurance team based in Hook. The successful applicant will provide information security support to one or more of EDS' major Defence projects. ... more >
Central London, United Kingdom | MI5 Security Services
Windows Technician - Competitive salaries + excellent benefits - Central London Getting the best out of technology is critical to helping us protect the UK. Join MI5 and use your skills and experience to help us ... more >
More job opportunities