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| Unified threat management specialists Fortinet has announced the most reported high-risk threats during the course of the last month, and it makes interesting reading. According to Fortinet it proves that birds of a feather do flock together as the most definable malware trend was most definitely the fact that the mass-mailer families of MyTob and MyDoom used their collective strength to dominate the top ten 10 list both individually and as a family force. "The mass-mailer families of MyTob and MyDoom showed strong activity in February and represent a significant portion of this month's malware attacks." Fortinet reports, adding "As an individual contributor, Trojan Pushdo!tr's pornography-laced zip-file attachments pulled out an aggressive two-day attack, allowing the Pushdo variant to make its debut onto the Top Ten." The consistent attacks by malware families just did not let up throughout the month, with only a periodic rapid-fire approach by individual variants punctuating the monotony. "Mutations of accessible malware code have allowed families, such as MyTob, to thrive and form a visible presence in today's threatscape," said Derek Manky, security research engineer for Fortinet. Here's that family top 10 in full: 1 Netsky (Mass mailer) 2 MyTob (Mass mailer) 3 HTML/Iframe_CID!exploit (Exploit) 4 Pushdo (Trojan) 5 Storm (Trojan) 6 MyDoom (Mass mailer) 7 Bagle (Mass mailer) 8 Agent (Adware) 9 Grew (Worm) 10 W32/Istbar.PK!tr.dldr (Trojan) While the individual threat list looks like this: 1 W32/Netsky!similar (Mass mailer) 2 HTML/Iframe_CID!exploit (Exploit) 3 W32/Small.FQS!tr.dldr (Trojan) 4 Adware/Agent (Adware) 5 W32/Grew.A!worm (Worm) 6 W32/Pushdo!tr (Trojan) 7 W32/MyDoom.N@mm (Exploit) 8 W32/Bagle.DY@mm (Mass mailer) 9 W32/MyTob.fam@mm (Mass mailer) 10 W32/MyTob.FR@mm (Mass mailer) |