Vietnam world’s second biggest source of spam: Kaspersky

omidomi

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There is one field where Vietnam is second only to the United States, but it is barely worth celebrating: spreading unwanted emails across the globe.

Vietnam replaced Russia as the second-biggest source of spam in the first quarter of 2016, with the U.S. remaining on top of the list, software security firm Kaspersky said in its latest Lab Spam and Phishing Report on May 12.

India, Brazil and China completed the top five, which according to the report consists entirely of “large, fast-developing countries with high levels of Internet connection.”

In Q1/2016, Kaspersky Lab registered 56.3 percent of spam in the global email flow, a 2.9 percent decrease against the same period in 2015, when it accounted for 59.2 percent.

The U.S. covered 12.43 percent of all spam emails, maintaining its ‘leadership,’ while 10.3 percent of the unwanted emails came from Vietnam.

The respective numbers from India, Brazil and China were 6.19 percent, 5.48 percent and 5.09 percent.

Russia fell from last year’s second place to seventh (4.89 percent) in Q1 2016. It followed closely behind France (4.90 percent), which was the world’s sixth biggest source of spam.



The world's biggest sources of spam. (Click on photo to view full-size chart). Photo: Kaspersky

The report also discovered that spam messages are becoming shorter. In the first quarter, the proportion of emails up to 2 KB or below made up 80 percent of all spam.

According to the report, the first quarter saw the amount of spam containing malicious attachments increase dramatically. The share of malicious attachments in mail reached a peak in March – four times greater than last year’s average.

The rapid growth was caused specifically by the popularity of crypto-ransomware, which was either contained in emails or downloaded to computers via a Trojan downloader.

“This growth confirms our long-term forecasts on the gradual criminalization of spam that makes it even more dangerous, as well as the reduction in the overall share of email traffic,” Kaspersky commented.

The anti-virus company said spam has been taken to “a new level of danger,” thanks to the diversity of languages, social engineering, lots of different types of attachments, and text changing within a single mass mailing.

In conclusion, Kaspersky said it is unlikely that the amount of malicious spam will continue to grow so rapidly, because “the more cybercriminals distribute malicious spam, the more people get to know of its dangers and the more careful they become about opening suspicious attachments.”

“Therefore, such attacks will gradually fade after a few months,” the company said.

“However, there is the risk they may be replaced by other, even more complex attacks.”
 

XhenEd

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A slight OT:
I don't understand why USA is leading in this chart. "Other" is clearly leading. :D
And so, why do they have to state "Other" when they can just specify the countries that are within that category? What's the real difference between "Other" and the countries specified?
 

DJ Panda

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"Spam" isn't what I would call it Kaspersky and security software is a must and its always good to know about updates. If you don't want emails it can take a few simple clicks of unsubscribing from their mail list. :)
 
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Noxx

A slight OT:
I don't understand why USA is leading in this chart. "Other" is clearly leading. :D
And so, why do they have to state "Other" when they can just specify the countries that are within that category? What's the real difference between "Other" and the countries specified?

If I had to guess -- credit card spam, and any American will test that there's too much of that garbage.
 

jamescv7

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@XhenEd: For sure the rest of percentage got identical percentage? ;) I'm not sure because its indeed misleading.

Since so many countries received spams everyday, likely very small percentage impact hence the result likely identical.
 
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Deleted member 178

I am in Vietnam :p

People there are very clueless about security , most are happy clickers, 90% of my friends's computers i came across were compromised in some ways (mostly toolbars, PUP, minor malwares) :p
 

soccer97

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I am in Vietnam :p

People there are very clueless about security , most are happy clickers, 90% of my friends's computers i came across were compromised in some ways (mostly toolbars, PUP, minor malwares) :p


That is sad. I have noticed that a lot of companies within the last few years have offered discounts and incentives to developing and some impoverished countries (not that any specific one is). I think Kaspersky offered one a year or so ago to Vietnam. I even noticed for Mobile Devices Samsung is offering incentives for users to update their devices. - recently some in India got a promo for 20% off a Domino's pizza if they had not already downloaded the latest security update. (Many devices offered in other or developing countries are budget devices, or have less features (esp. memory) to reduce cost). A user may think twice before upgrading firmware. This promo is an example of an outreach from Samsung of all Mobile companies (I only say this because of the long delays of firmware updates reaching the end user in the US)!

I think the goal of the companies is not only to help the citizens of those companies protect themselves, but the less PC's and devices infected with malware that may be pushing Spam or be infected with C&C viruses, it reduces the overall proliferation, making all users in the world just a smidgen bit safer per device that is clean and protected. I hate to make this comparison, but it's kind of like herd immunity.

Source:

Samsung Wants Users To Update Their Android Devices More Often In India, Offers Domino's Pizza Coupons
 

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