
Low-cost domain names fueling rise in global spamAdd to March 13, 2007 According to new statistics available from McAfee, free or low-cost registration of new domain names is drastically fueling the growth in Web sites exclusively used for spamming or hosting malicious software. Released yesterday, McAfee's study highlights the growing problem concerning how Web sites are easily registered, and the simplicity with which bad actors can spoof whole Web sites to continue online scams. The Internet security company analyzed 8.1 million of the world's most trafficked Web sites registered on 265 top-level domains (TLDs), such as ".com" and ".biz" along with country-specific ones, such as ".jp" for Japan, etc. McAfee now offers SiteAdvisor, a free tool that determines if sites send spam, host bad programs or have excessive pop-ups. McAfee, which acquired SiteAdvisor in April last year, also offers a pay version with more advanced features. Small islands with their own TLDs remain the most troublesome. For example, some 18.5 percent of Web sites registered under the ".st" TLD are considered "risky" for either spam or other malicious activity, McAfee said. The TLD belongs to Sao Tome and Principe, a country of two volcanic islands west of Gabon. Tokelau (.tk), a territory of New Zealand in the south Pacific, and Niue (.nu), also in the south Pacific (east of Tonga) even give out domains for free! That's good for scammers, who often need to register new domains as older ones are blocked by security software. To make matters worse, Niue even allows anonymous registration of Web sites. In 1998, the country declared a "zero tolerance" policy against spammers, but McAfee said it wasn't a deterrent. The safest TLDs belong to countries with stronger registration rules. Japan, Ireland, Sweden and Finland require a local postal address, while businesses in Norway have to register with the government to get a ".no" domain. Consequently, McAfee found the lowest percentage of bad Web sites in those domains. Australia and Canada, McAfee said, require a local contact for registration, which often deters spammer since registrations take more time. The ".info" domain ranked first among generic TLDs for its percentage of risky sites, at 7.5 percent, McAfee said. The domain also hosts many Web sites that send "spammy" e-mail, the vendor said. SiteAdvisor submits an e-mail address to Web sites and counts how many e-mails are received. Users have a 73.2 percent chance of receiving a spam e-mail by giving their address to a random ".info" site, McAfee said. The ".com" domain -- created in the 1980s -- came in second for risk, with 5.5 percent of its Web sites considered questionable, McAfee said. Add to Source: IT World Canada Save Internet Security.ca's URL to the list of your favorite web sites in your Web browser by clicking here. Become an authorized reseller of Proxy Sentinel™ and Firewall Sentinel™. Do like the rest of our authorized resellers and have your clients benefit the important security features of our products and solutions, while increasing your sales at the same time. Click here for all the details. You can link to the
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