What mutating spyware reveals about the future of security
Computerworld -
According to a July report from the Pew Internet & Americal Life Project, more than 90% of Internet users have changed their online behavior to avoid spyware. That is a remarkably high level of awareness, considering the relative newness of the spyware threat.
The study generally reports on consumer behavior, but as you know, spyware is hardly a stranger to the enterprise. And while it's getting increasing attention from IT managers, it deserves another, closer look. Current developments in spyware engineering foreshadow dangerous challenges for enterprise security. Here's why.
Spyware is literally evolving -- mutating in the wild to avoid detection. This is an ominous trend, and it's getting worse: Cases of mutating spyware have more than doubled since the start of the year. And this is true mutation, unlike simple polymorphism. Impressive though it may sound, a polymorphic threat simply has multiple strains or chooses its name or location at install time, normally from a preset list. Most "mutating" malware in recent years has used these primitive techniques, which even basic signature-based solutions could handle with simple heuristics.
Most of the antispyware products in the field are catching only these weak strains. And though Darwin might have protested invoking natural selection for digital creations, the fittest spyware mutations don't merely survive -- they thrive. With no "predators" to stop them, the mutated spyware often finds an inviting home in the unsuspecting enterprise. This is despite the legions of IT managers who have deployed traditional antispyware products. Unfortunately, these traditional solutions don't work against true mutation, and the IT managers are lulled into a false sense of security. With their guard down, the IT managers prove the old adage that a false sense of security is worse than no security at all.
Why has spyware become such a significant threat so quickly? Money, of course. The riches to be made using many of today's threats -- spyware, spam, even viruses now -- attract serious talent. Indeed, the dirty little secret of the security industry is that the top bad guys are just as smart as the security vendors. Ironically, they share tools and techniques better than most security vendors. And they use the same best practices.
For example, the spyware known as CoolWebSearch is a notorious browser hijacker. There are dozens of variants, some of which actually employ the same auto-update strategy as security products. Auto-updating played a major role in helping the stronger strains stay one step ahead of antispyware products for months. Vendors have been forced to release
Additional Resources


White Papers & Webcasts
Mitigating Litigation Risk with Email Management Tools
Does your company have an email retention policy that protects it when litigation occurs? IDC discusses effective email retention policies and the role...
Managing And Protecting Your Ever Increasing Mobile Assets
Learn best practices for desktop and application virtualization, computer security, and computer life-cycle management....
Protecting Content During Business Disruption: Are You Covered?
Learn how ECM is helping Tulane University and the 13th Judicial Circuit Court implement disaster readiness programs....
Why Compliance Pays
This OnDemand webcast explores the relationship that firms with best compliance records have higher revenue, greater customer retention, lower financial losses from data...
Beyond PCI Checklists: Securing Cardholder Data with Tripwire's Enhanced File Integrity Monitoring
How do organizations pass their PCI DSS audits yet still suffer security breaches? Paying attention to PCI DSS checklists only partially secures the...
Best Practices for Managing Business Risks from the Use of IT
(Source: Symantec) Based on exhaustive benchmarks conducted by the IT Policy Compliance, this session highlights the relationship between business risks and use of...
Authentication as a Service by Forrester Research
Authentication-as-a-Service: understand the benefits of two factor authentication and the best ways to implement it....
Sun OpenSSO Enterprise Webinar
(Source: Sun) This webinar replay discusses Sun OpenSSO Enterprise innovation--the single, open-source solution that helps your business solve the challenges around internal access...
Sustaining SOX Compliance: Best Practices to Mitigate Risk, Automate Compliance, and Reduce Costs
Since the adoption of SOX, much has been learned about IT compliance. Discover how to make SOX efforts more effective in "Sustaining Sox...
Agile Enterprise Content Management (ECM) for Rapid ROI
(Source: IBM) Content rich business processes are a core feature of daily operations at just about any organization today. Very often these essential...
Subscribe to Computerworld
