Close
Send email
Close
Log in
Close
Registration
Please, fill in all the fields below, we consider all information confidential, and guarantee not to share it with any third party.
You will receive 500 bonus credits on your account immediately after registering.

Login

Country
E-mail
We will send a registration confirmation link to your email
Password
Confirm
Password
Please enter the numbers/letters you see
on the picture into the field to the right
Please fill all fields to submit your registration
Close
Site maintenance is being carried out at the moment. We'll be back online on soon. If you have any questions, please feel free to mail on info@liveonlinetranslation.com
News Archive / Translation services used to pump out polyglot spam 26.07.2010

Spammers are making greater use of automated translation services and templates to create multiple language junk mail runs.

The tactic has resulted in even greater volumes of spam in email traffic to countries in continental Europe, in particular, according to the latest monthly security report by net services firm Messagelabs. While global spam volumes dropped slightly by around one percentage point to 89.4 per cent, junk mail flows into countries including Germany, France and The Netherlands are experiencing levels of over 95 per cent.

Germany overtook France as the world's most dumped on country, with junk mail levels rising to 97.5 per cent. This volume compares with 86.0 per cent in the US, 93.6 per cent in the UK and 90.6 per cent in Japan. Local language spam makes up 46 per cent of spam in Germany and 53 per cent in France. In The Netherlands, 25 percent of spam is in Dutch. In Japan, 62.3 per cent is in non-English languages and in China this number is 54.7 per cent. MessageLabs said greater use of online translation tools, rather than other factors such as internationalisation of those who send spam, accounts for the changes.

"Translation services and templates enable the spammers to push out multiple-language spam attacks, and some dubious translations through the use of poor online services highlight the use of these antics," explained Paul Wood, MessageLabs Intelligence senior analyst at Symantec. "Non-English spam now accounts for one in every 20 spam messages, a figure we’ll be closely monitoring to see if spammers continue with their global expansion."

Other developments monitored by MessageLabs suggest VXers have taken an early summer holiday. 58.8 per cent of the incidents of web-based malware detected by MessageLabs in June were down to new strains of malware. In July, by contrast, 99.3 per cent of web-based malware was down to variants it had logged before the start of the month, and just 0.7 per cent was new. MessageLabs said that despite the slowdown, the number of websites detected which harboured malware of one sort or another reached a nine month high of 3,618.

source: http://www.theregister.co.uk


See also:
Copyright 2009—2010 LiveOnlineTranslation