Trojans dominate top ten virus threats

Last month, users were more likely to be struck by trojans than any other kind of virus.

The main threat was Clicker.CM. an ad-serving trojan. Also prevalent were three variants of the Wimad trojan downloader, according to a report from security firm BitDefender. The Wimad trojan takes on the appearance of a codec downloader.

The Trojan.Qhost.AKR, a piece of malware that tries to disable anti-virus updates, was the fifth most widely seen, and a Flash exploit and the Trojan.Swizzor.1 virus were next.

An an ActiveX control exploit called SinaDLoader ActiveX was the eighth most seen. This one tricks a browser into downloading and installing malware.

The last two were a virus that spreads via peer-to-peer file sharing and a downloader for a fake anti-virus package called “XP Antivirus.”

Sorin Dudea, head of virus research at BitDefender said in a statement: “XP Antivirus has had previous forms. It used to appear with a valid digital signature and a lengthy [end-user license agreement0, from sites with security-related names. As such it was somewhat of a champion in the social engineering area, convincing victims that it was in fact a legitimate piece of security software.

"Measures taken to revoke the malware's digital signature by GlobalSign [an SSL certificate provider] and the denial-of-anonymity to the people who ran sites hosting it by Directi [a web services firm], seem to has put a dent in the operation,” he said.

Sign up to our newsletters

More in News

Bitcoin mining botnet has become one of the most prevalent cyber threats

Fortinet researchers have tracked 100,000 new ZeroAccess trojan infections per week, making the botnet very lucrative to its owners.

House Intelligence Committee OKs amended version of controversial CISPA

House Intelligence Committee OKs amended version of controversial ...

Despite the 18-to-2 vote in favor of the bill proposal, privacy advocates likely will not be satisfied, considering two key amendments reportedly were shot down.

Judge rules hospital can ask ISP for help in ID'ing alleged hackers

Judge rules hospital can ask ISP for help ...

The case stems from two incidents where at least one individual is accused of accessing the hospital's network to spread "defamatory" messages to employees.