160,000 new malware samples appear each day

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Petrovic

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Malware is still being created at the record levels reached in the previous quarter: 15 million new samples were generated, at an average rate of 160,000 every day, according to Panda Security.

pandasecurity-092014.jpg

Trojans, once again, have accounted for more infections (62.8%) than any other type of malware, although this figure is lower than the previous quarter (79.90%).

Potentially Unwanted Programs (PUPs) are in second place with 24.77% of infections, underlining how these techniques are now being used massively. A long way behind came adware/spyware (7.09%), viruses (2.68%) and worms (2.66%).

The global infection rate during the second quarter of 2014 was 36.87%, a significant rise on recent periods, thanks largely to the proliferation of PUPs. Country by country, China once again had the most infections, with a rate of 51.05%, followed by Peru (44.34%) and Turkey (44.12%).

pandasecurity-092014a.jpg

It’s clear from this ranking that the regions with the highest levels of infections are Asia and Latin America. Spain also has an infection rate above the global average with 37.67%.

On the other hand, Europe is the area with the lowest infection rate, with nine countries ranked among the least infected countries. Sweden (22.13%), Norway (22.26%) and Germany (22.88%) had the lowest rates while Japan, with an infection rate of 24.21%, was the only non-European country in the top ten of this ranking.
 
Come to think of it, China, with its popular FREE 360 security products (360 IS and 360 TS), plus Baidu antivirus Free, is still the country with most infections!
 
@Petrovic Nice. Now you have made the already Paranoid Internet users more paranoid, even though they only use their Home Network to visit a handful of websites, but need 10 layers of Antivirus and Anonymity protection software. :D
 
Old news as we already knew this, however it points out where AV programs and individual networks manage to keep things safer.
In regards to Asian AV programs they are fighting a uphill battle to normalize their networks and infrastructure, which is something that the EU has mastered years ago.
 
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