Help | Contact | Forum | Affiliates | Press Purchase Download Features Screenshots Demo

Link shorteners now favourite tool for spammers

Spammers are increasingly making use of URL-shortening services to get their messages through, according to MessageLabs.

The security firm said in its July Intelligence Report that the services are being used in record numbers by botnet operators as a way to evade anti-spam filters.

MessageLabs found that during 14 days in June URL-shortening services accounted for more than 0.5 per cent of all spam.

"The average volume of spam containing shortened URLs has increased and MessageLabs Intelligence is seeing more days where shortened URLs are included in significant volumes of spam," the company said in the report.

"This indicates that the adoption of shortened URLs in spam is becoming a sustained tactic rather than an occasional use tactic."

Among the heaviest users of the tactic has been the Storm botnet. MessageLabs found that the botnet contributed more than 11 per cent of all URL-shortened spam messages.

Read Original Story



News 1 year ago



Related Stories:

Facebook warns investors of potential SPAM DELUGE

Google, Microsoft, Yahoo! to fight email spam

Banks, Internet companies team up to fight spam

Facebook, Washington state target online spam

Nokia fined in Australia for spam-texting its own customers

Global spam declines as malware encounters pick up: report

McAfee Patches Spam Relay Flaw in SaaS Total Protection Service

McAfee to plug spam hole this week

Hackers Target Children as Adults Wise Up to Spam

How Facebook Took Down Koobface Malware