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Report discloses spam statistics for June 2013

Figures for spam in June have been released, and indicate an increase in spam in email traffic of 1.4 percentage points, averaging at 71.1%. This is according to Kaspersky Lab analysts, who also reveal that the percentage of malicious attachments found in emails dropped by one percentage point from the previous month, to 1.8%.
Report discloses spam statistics for June 2013

Last month the spammers actively used the name of Steve Jobs, Apple's founder. The heading of the unsolicited email invited the recipient to get to know the secret of the famous businessman's success, but the body of message contained an advert for free training sessions. Its organisers promised in just 1.5 hours to teach everybody how to make a profitable business out of a hobby. Steve Jobs was used to attract attention to the training.

Common tricks used by spammers

In addition to the offers of training courses promising to disclose the secret of Steve Jobs' success, in June we often met spam messages offering huge discounts on Apple devices. To make the mailing look more legitimate, the scammers entered the name of the company in the 'From' field, though the email address has nothing to do with Apple. The authors of these emails stressed that there was a limited quantity of goods and it was essential to snap them up right away. This widespread trick was used to encourage the user to make a quick decision and thus to click the link and order the goods.

Yet another theme exploited by spammers was offers of admission to US universities as well as offers of online education at the user's convenience. These emails often included links to pages with application forms for the course. Interestingly, the addresses of the web pages vary from email to email and are often created on the day the mailing is sent. This is probably how the authors of the mass mailing collect personal user data.

"In June, spammers continued to use familiar tricks. In particular, we recorded several mass mailings advertising both conventional and electronic cigarettes where the organisers used the Google Translate service to process spam links. Moreover, the spammers added a randomly generated set of letters and names of Google domains in different languages to the end of links", says Tatyana Shcherbakova, senior spam analyst, Kaspersky Lab.

Significant spammers

As before, a significant part of the world's spam came from China (24%) and the US (17%). South Korea came third with 14% of all distributed spam.

South Korea remained the leading source of spam sent to European users (53.3%): its share grew by 9.6 percentage points. The US (4.6%) and Vietnam (3.7%) moved down to fourth and fifth positions yielding to Italy (6.7%) and Taiwan (5%) respectively. Italy's figure grew by 3.9 percentage points compared with May when this country was only seventh in the rating.

Malicious attachments were found in 1.8% of all emails. As in the previous month, the scammers often used their favorite trick - notifications sent on behalf of well-known companies.

In June, the number of attacks targeting email and IMS increased drastically, because in the summer holidays (in Europe) the number of e-mail users and the users of such programmes as ICQ, Jabber and Skype grows. There is substantial demand for accounts of this type on the black market, which encourages phishers to try to grab login details for them.

The full version of the spam report for June 2013 is available at securelist.com

For more information, go to www.kaspersky.co.za.

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