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Reputation-based security to dominate

Reputation-based security to dominate

By:  Rafael Ruffolo  On: 20 Nov 2009 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

Symantec says new malware variants have made traditional, signature-based anti-virus tools increasingly inefficient. Plus, why CAPTCHA technology is actually forcing spammers to cut into their profits and hire some outside help

With malware-infected programs and Web sites now being created at a higher rate than their legitimate counterparts, Symantec Corp. is predicting security vendors will shift toward a reputation-based approach to stopping hackers.

 

In a new report outlining its 2010 security predictions, released earlier this week, the company argued that the traditional approach to anti-virus software is insufficient to stop the variety of unique malware variants that have popped up over the last year. This means that it is no longer feasible to focus solely on analyzing malware.

 

Paul Wood, a senior analyst with Symantec’s MessageLabs division, said the high availability of Web attack tool kits has opened up the hacking industry to many new candidates who might not have otherwise had the technical abilities to make an attack.

 

And with many of these hackers using social engineering and obfuscation techniques to trick users into downloading their malicious apps, the ability of AV vendors to sort the good from the bad needs to be ramped up using a reputation-based approach.

 

“Reputation security looks at all software files, not just malicious ones,” Wood said.

 

“If you have your anti-virus software running on a number of machines in the world, those machines can contribute to your database of information regarding the software on those machines. You can then start to build a reputation knowledge base.”

 

For instance, if there’s a particular program that is in high circulation, Symantec would be able to give it a stamp of approval and more aggressively monitor programs that are building in popularity, he said.

 

This reputation-based technique is used by Google to rank news results through its search engine, as well as many anti-spam e-mail clients that measure the respectability of IP addresses.

 

One such technique designed to get around this are fast flux botnets, used by some spammers to hide phishing and malicious Web sites behind a constantly changing network of compromised IP addresses. Each of their malicious domains are given little “time to live,” which means security experts will rarely have the time to make a trace and identify where the attack is coming from.

 


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Rafael Ruffolo Rafael Ruffolo was a senior writer for ComputerWorld Canada from 2006 to 2011. He was the winner of a Kenneth R. Wilson award for business journalism in 2009.

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