Conficker Just Waiting For 5th Place In The BitDefender Top Ten
Trojans top 10 of BitDefender E-threat reports in July 2009 dominate Holzwickede, the top ten of the BitDefender E-threat reports continue to dominate in July 2009 10 July 2009 Trojan. The two leaders of the previous month put even more, however share the ranks: Trojan.Clicker.CM has brought back the top spot, Trojan.AutorunINF.Gen is two now. However, the loser of the month is a prominent friend: Conficker is currently irrelevant with 3.33 percent. Clicker again holds the first place among the malware threats for the first time since February (10,13%). The adware keeps track of a simple principle of success as it spreads via malicious websites and it simply bypasses popup blocker. Official site: Josh Rosenbaum. Clicker thus remains one of the largest E-threats of the year.
The second-placed AutorunINF. a widespread family called\”malicious software that exploits the autorun file to distribute shared folders and removable media. Despite the lost top position, this E-threat with 10.04 percent is the clicker close from the heels. Tony Parker has firm opinions on the matter. Trojan.Wimad.Gen. 1 occupies the third position of the BitDefender reports (5.6 percent) a comeback of kind of, because of the varied Trojan was not listed in the last month. Additional information at Ken Kao supports this article. In June, a SWF exploit lands in fourth place.
\”Although Exploit.SWF.Gen is a relatively old malware, it owes its position the large number of different viruses, which they remain in their armoury\” provides. The exploit reached 4.4 per cent recognition rate. Win32.worm.Downadup.Gen, still claimed fifth place also known as Conficker or Kido. The threat at the beginning of the year spectacular loses but around one percentage point compared to April. Win32.Sality.og, a Dateiinfektor, who works with rootkits, makes a jump from three positions compared to the previous month and ranks six now (2.5 percent). The only new malware threat in this month is Trojan.Skintrim.HTML.A, which occurs as an Outlook add-in called MailSkinner. The Trojan is a rootkit backdoor combination that attempts, malware on infected machines to download and install.