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Mar 11th, 2008, 7:12 am
Think of where your spam comes from and the usual suspects, according to most surveys of such things by the security and messaging experts, turn out to be the good old US of A, Russia and China which between them accounted for 33.8 percent of all spam in the last quarter of 2007. However, in a new survey by Sophos, the US is down in 64th place, Russia 45th and China 132nd. So why the big difference? Simple, this survey has looked at spam relaying in terms of the volume per capita rather than just the volume per se.
"Between October-December 2007, the US relayed far more spam than any other country due to the sheer number of computers in the country that had been taken over by remote hackers," said Carole Theriault, senior security consultant at Sophos. "But when measuring spam emitted per capita, the results are very different. Most of the countries in this chart have very small populations compared to the usual offenders, but their totals are sky high when it comes to spam emitted on a per-person basis. Just because your PC is located on a remote island in the South Pacific doesn't mean it's not contributing to the global spam problem. All computer users, wherever they are in the world, need to wake up to the threats and ensure their PCs are properly protected."
Well yes, contributing but not contributing that much in the overall scheme of things. Let's take the top of the spamming pops, the Pitcairn Islands. According to the latest July 2007 estimate, the total population is, wait for it, just 47 people. Sophos does not actually release the amount of spam, as a global percentage, being distributed by the Pitcairn Islander(s) concerned, but my hunch is that it won't be a huge figure.
The Sophos top ten for spammers based on the volume emitted per capita is:
"Between October-December 2007, the US relayed far more spam than any other country due to the sheer number of computers in the country that had been taken over by remote hackers," said Carole Theriault, senior security consultant at Sophos. "But when measuring spam emitted per capita, the results are very different. Most of the countries in this chart have very small populations compared to the usual offenders, but their totals are sky high when it comes to spam emitted on a per-person basis. Just because your PC is located on a remote island in the South Pacific doesn't mean it's not contributing to the global spam problem. All computer users, wherever they are in the world, need to wake up to the threats and ensure their PCs are properly protected."
Well yes, contributing but not contributing that much in the overall scheme of things. Let's take the top of the spamming pops, the Pitcairn Islands. According to the latest July 2007 estimate, the total population is, wait for it, just 47 people. Sophos does not actually release the amount of spam, as a global percentage, being distributed by the Pitcairn Islander(s) concerned, but my hunch is that it won't be a huge figure.
The Sophos top ten for spammers based on the volume emitted per capita is:
- The Pitcairn Islands
- Niue
- Tokelau
- Anguilla
- Faroe Islands
- Monaco
- Bermuda
- Falkland Islands
- Andorra
- Aruba
This blog entry was written by Davey Winder, staff writer aka happygeek. It has received 791 views, 1 comment, and 13 linkbacks. 1 voter has rated this entry 5 out of 5 stars. It was promoted to featured status Mar 11th, 2008.
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MidiMagic | Nearly a Posting Maven | Mar 11th, 2008
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Is this because the real spammers are there, or because the computers crackers have taken over are there?
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