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Porn spam to social networks rising rapidly
VIRTUALISATION
Porn spam to social networks rising rapidly | Porn spam to social networks rising rapidly |
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| by Peter Dinham | |
| Wednesday, 16 September 2009 | |
The adult industry has tapped into the increasing popularity of social networks, with a rapid rise in porn spam now bombarding sites like Twitter, Facebook and MySpace, and their subscribers, with everything from provocative images to hidden malware.Featured Whitepaper
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According to BitDefender researcher, Alexandru Catalin Cosoi, 15 percent of Twitter traffic is now porn spam, with the porn spammers registering accounts, posting up a provocative image as their avatar, following unsuspecting Twitter users and then, begin sending shortened URLs that link to pornographic material. Meanwhile, on Facebook and MySpace, porn spam accounts for seven percent and 10 percent of total traffic, respectively, Cosoi says. Cosoi says that BitDefender’s research shows, more broadly, that while email was the prime medium via which to distribute porn spam, spammers have taken note of users' switch to social networking and micro-blogging websites and are targeting them in other ways. “Not all porn spam contains links to inappropriate images or websites. Some porn spam contains links that facilitate the connection for downloading of malware. “Such malware can be activated at the point of infection then wait dormant for instructions to activate at a later date or hide until activated by a set of keywords, Cosoi warns. And, Cosoi cautions that there's always going to be malware that makes use of spam, “especially porn," and that spammers are "not looking to infect people’s computers with a virus, malware or Trojans,” but, he adds, “they actually have a business and they are using spam to promote it." |
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