Porn spam triples

By
Follow google news

Pornographic spam tripled during May from 5.62 to 14.05 percent of all spam, according to an internet security firm.

Pornographic spam tripled during May from 5.62 to 14.05 percent of all spam, according to an internet security firm.


Clearswift's Monthly Spam Index categorised spam emails and examined trends over the course of the month.

As well as the rise in the amount of pornographic related spam, the Spam Index also highlighted the re-emergence of e-cards bearing malicious software.

The company said e-card spam lured recipients into installing malware and was traditionally popular around Christmas.

Peter Croft, managing director of Clearswift Asia Pacific, said that email threats came in all guises and organisations needed to be prepared.

“Anti-virus is a good start but it’s nowhere near enough," Croft said in a statement. "Companies need to use intelligent content filtering software which can block executable files for the most robust defence possible.”

Clearswift said the highest profile spam during May was a message claiming pop star Michael Jackson had committed suicide. The message carried a weblink which installed a trojan on the recipient's computer.

The strangest spam reported by Clearswift took advantage of the buzz around the launch of the reality TV show Big Brother in many European countries. The emails invited contestants to eat a spoonful of maggots on live TV.

Add iTnews as your trusted source

Got a news tip for our journalists? Share it with us anonymously here.
Tags:

Most Read Articles

Anthropic opens Claude Mythos Preview AI program to Australia

Anthropic opens Claude Mythos Preview AI program to Australia

Defence says Palantir is "sandboxed" in its environment

Defence says Palantir is "sandboxed" in its environment

Services Australia describes fraud, debt-related machine learning use cases

Services Australia describes fraud, debt-related machine learning use cases

Microsoft backs down on legal threats against 0day disclosing researchers

Microsoft backs down on legal threats against 0day disclosing researchers

Log In

  |  Forgot your password?