| Corporate
PCs 'riddled with spyware'
Corporate
systems are riddled with spyware, according
to a study by an anti-spyware firm.
Companies voluntarily using Webroot's
Corporate SpyAudit tool had an average
of 20 nasties per PC, Webroot reports.
Most
of the items found were harmless cookies.
But average five per cent of the PCs
scanned had system monitors and 5.5
per cent had Trojan horse programs,
the two most nefarious and potentially
malicious forms of spyware. The audit
- based on scans of more than 10,000
systems, used by more than 4,100 companies
- is touted by Webroot as the first
comprehensive analysis of the presence
of spyware within corporate networks.
Webroot
has been looking at spyware incidents
on consumer PCs for some time, finding
an average 26 nasties per PC. So corporate
PCs are little cleaner than those used
by consumers. Webroot hopes its latest
survey will shake the notion that corporate
systems are protected from spyware attacks
by current anti-virus and firewall systems.
Selling more of its anti-spyware software
into its target enterprise market will
be the happy outcome of such a realisation,
Webroot hopes.
"The
enterprise offers a bounty exponentially
larger than what the everyday consumer's
PC might surrender to a spyware program,"
said Richard Stiennon, Webroot's vice
president of threat research. "Everything
from customer information to payroll
details to product specs and source
code are all potential spyware targets.
And beyond the potential theft of sensitive
information, more benign forms of spyware,
like adware, lead to increased bandwidth
consumption and decreased employee productivity."
Spyware
applications secretly forward information
about a user's online activities to
third parties without a user's knowledge
or permission. Typically, spyware arrives
bundled with freeware or shareware games
or P2P applications or through e-mail.
According
to
a study by analyst IDC published yesterday,
the need to identify and eradicate these
parasitic programmes will drive anti-spyware
software revenues from $12m in 2003
to $305m in 2008. IDC reckons two in
three PCs are infected with some form
of spyware.
By
John
Leyden , reproduced from The
Register, www.theregister.co.uk
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