27 June 2013

Google maps 13k malicious Australian websites

Approximately 13,000 websites hosted within Australia and scanned by search giant Google in the past year were found to contain malicious software, or malware, that has the potential to infect the computers of visitors to those websites.

 Google's new report shows how many websites were found to compromised in Australia in the past year.

The figure is contained in an expanded "Transparency Report" released by Google, which now includes a maps of spots around the world where hackers are laying traps or baiting internet users.
In Australia, 7 per cent of the 189,890 local websites Google scanned (13,292 websites) were found to be compromised in the past year.

The Australian web hosting company which had the most compromised customer websites was Aust Domains International, with 2109 websites found to be infected in the past year. NetRegsitry came second, with 1771 compromised sites, and Uberglobal third, with 1212 compromised websites.

"Two of the biggest threats online are malicious software that can take control of your computer, and phishing scams that try to trick you into sharing passwords or other private information," Google engineer Lucas Ballard said in a blog post on Tuesday.

"So today we're launching a new section on our Transparency Report that will shed more light on the sources of malware and phishing attacks."

Information for the new section comes from a Safe Browsing program Google launched in 2006 to warn internet travelers when they were heading for trouble such as bogus bank websites or pages booby-trapped with computer viruses.

"We're currently flagging up to 10,000 sites a day, and because we share this technology with other browsers there are about one billion users we can help keep safe," Ballard said.

The new section added at google.com/transparencyreport/safebrowsing/ included a map that showed that "malware" hotspots include India and Central Europe.

Google's Transparency Report also provides information about government requests around the world for information from the California-based internet giant and demands for removal of content from online properties.

Last week, Google said that it asked a special US court handling national security investigations for permission to publish more open with the public about numbers of requests.

The court filing in Washington came amid a firestorm of protests over revelations that the National Security Agency had accessed vast amounts of data in a surveillance program under the supervision of the secret court.


theage.com.au 26 June 2013

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