FIRST told of Chinese PC hijack explosion
VANCOUVER, CANADA, JUNE 25. The number of innocent individuals in China whose personal computers were hijacked by criminals rose by a staggering 2125 per cent between 2006 and 2007, delegates were told here today at the 20th annual conference of FIRST, the Forum of Incident Response and Security Teams.
During sessions when the need for sophisticated approaches to combat the increasing sophistication of Internet crime rode high on the conference agenda, Dr Minghua Wang [MINGHUA WANG] who heads China’s Computer Emergency Response Team Co-ordination Centre, revealed that while the number of PC’s hijacked for remote Trojan hosting was already relatively high at 44,717 at the end of 2006, twelve months later the number had exploded to nearly a million – 995,154.
“Malicious websites have become a major threat to normal Internet users in China,” he said.
“We now have web-based Trojan networks, driven by economic profit and launched by experienced and well organised black hats, with hundreds of malicious hosts at different locations within China, and even abroad.
“We need co-operation between computer emergency response teams and law enforcers.”
His theme that ‘net crime is now almost entirely gain-driven was picked up later in the day by Terri Forslof [TERRI FORSLOF], manager of security response for TippingPoint Technologies.
“Over a ten year period hack for fun and hack for fame has become hack for profit,” she said.
“We now have a parasitic micro-economy of mature criminal organisations equipped with almost unlimited money and resources and mature engineering practices, using a long term focus to engage in multi-year planning.
“We defenders have to adapt and keep pace.”
Keynote speaker George Stathakopoulos [STATHAKOPOULOS], general manager of security engineering and communications at the Microsoft Corporation, agreed, warning that security professionals who didn’t keep up with rapidly evolving crime patterns risked becoming “security historians” rather than security practitioners.
Opening the conference, FIRST president and steering committee chair Derrick Scholl [DERRICK SCHOLL] reminded members of the unique role they play:
“There really is no other organisation in the world which can solve the problems which we solve,” he said. “There is no government or company which can find the solutions we can find, because they really have to be found by a collection of people from all walks of life and from different countries and cultures who are willing to think and work together.”
More than 400 delegates have come to Vancouver from 48 countries, making this by some estimates the world’s biggest security conference.
Founded in 1990, FIRST is a non-profit body which consists of Internet emergency response teams from 194 corporations, government bodies, universities and other institutions from across the Americas, Asia, Europe and Oceania. It leads the world fight-back against cyber-crime, sabotage and terrorism, and promotes co-operation between CERT’s and law enforcement agencies.
More information about the conference at: www.first.org/conference/2008
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