U. S host the highest number of malicious sites
The security company AVG Technologies released an essay of 10 March 2010, showing that most of the bad websites (44%) get their hosting services from the U.S. servers. After the U.S., China and Germany, each at 5%. Most of these malware serving sites does not really concern hackers before they decide to offer deeds. We found that a total of almost 4600 places in the U. S had surgery servers. Comment on the results show that the company in its document that really is wrong that only countries that are indifferent about e-crime laws, the host malware. Karel Obluk, chief technology officer at AVG said the malware is not just a problem with illegal servers located in countries that do not actively enforce e-crime laws. ITWire published in the March 11, 2010. Obluk said his company’s studies show that harmful content is more likely to end in the U. S comparison web servers located in Eastern Europe or Asia. This is understandable, as cyber criminals are specifically targeted to the U. S market, which has plenty of advanced Internet infrastructure to provide access to the threat more easily and at low cost host. The CTO also said that the most striking aspect of the malware-hosting servers is that they have grown in number from September 2009 to February 2010. With modern methods of hackers to be extremely difficult to achieve a normal user can not determine if a site puts harmful content. Therefore, the need for a product which is sufficient for “the Web. Obluk added that it is worth noting that was during September 2009-February 2010, about half of all websites supported in malicious servers active and hosted malware with just 24 hours or less. Transient natural sites make it very difficult to detect and therefore require conventional security software trusted to act in time, according to reports in the Indian border on 10 March 2010. Time, according to security experts, AVG study suggest an increasing number of websites that serve a malware that targets end users. This malware usually steal data from credit card, internet banking data, passwords to social networking sites and personal identities.
