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Cameroon top exporter of Malware: McAfee

By | December 4, 2009, 12:49 PM PST

On Africas’s east coast, Somalia has world’s most brazen and infamous maritime pirates. On the Dark Continent’s western shore, Cameroon has got digital piracy covered with the most top level domains infected with Malware.

That’s the conclusion of McAfee’s latest Mapping the Malware survey of the world’s most digitally dangerous domains. Beware of any URL ending .CM for there’s a better than one in three chance a worm, Trojan or virus is lurking within. Malware is exactly what it sounds like, malicious software.

Let’s put that in perspective. The second riskiest top level domain is .com which is almost without a doubt the web domains you and I click on most with a slightly less than one in three chances it’s infected. When was the last time you clicked on a .com URL and wondered if you’d be victimized by Malware? Like never?

Rounding out the top five are China, Samoa and .INFO.

While 5.8 per cent of the 27 million domains evaluated in the report were deemed risky compared to 4.1 per cent in both 2007-08, determining if the web is a more dangerous place than it was a year ago is difficult, according to the survey. That’s because McAfee’s survey methodology changed this year and is purported to be more accurate and proportionally weighted (Let’s face it: the huge .com domain and .PH denoting the Philipines are not created equal).

Anyway, McAfee published a handy home security type map so you can quickly quickly assess threats (below).

Or you can buy its anti-malware software. That’s what bugs me about this  survey - look no further than survey’s conclusion for the sales pitch.

“The best way to stay safe is to have an up-to-date
security suite, like McAfee® Total Protection, which
also has safe search technology, like McAfee
SiteAdvisor,” the report concludes. A bit of a scare tactic?

Those of us who do not have backgrounds in computer security or IT must make a leap of faith and accept what’s in the report. My new laptop hounds me to try Norton Internet Security and makes me click on “close without enabling security” to get the trial invitation out of my face. That’s a not-so-subtle scare tactic that suggests if I don’t load Norton Internet Security RIGHT NOW, my laptop will be fatally infected.

My one tussle with Malware (a Trojan) this year was taken care of with a free download called MalwareBytes’ Anti-Malware. There’s also a version that cost $25 one time which automatically scans your computer. The  freebie requires manual scans. In my frantic web search to determine how to get rid of it, I learned Malwarebytes was only program that could kill it. And it did.

I know it’s a dangerous digital world out there and McAfee’s survey could very well be the closest thing to an accurate assessement of such shadowy threats. But hypothesize for a moment if Microsoft Windows muted these threats and they went down by 50 per cent. Would McAfee report that, too?

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John Dodge

About John Dodge

John Dodge was a contributing editor for SmartPlanet from 2009 to 2010.

John Dodge

John Dodge

Contributing Editor, Technology

John Dodge has written for the Wall Street Journal, Boston Globe, PC Week (now eWeek), EDN, Design News, Electronic Business, Bio-IT World, Health-IT World, Lowell Sun, Haverhill Gazette and Newburyport Daily News. He is based in Massachusetts.

Follow him on Twitter.

John Dodge

John Dodge

John Dodge prides himself on completely independent journalism. His opinions, observations and reporting are not influenced by any financial holdings. He holds no shares in computer, electronics, software or Internet companies. He also has no business affiliations with organizations except with those for which he creates content as a freelancer.

He writes for SmartPlanet and is not an employee of CBS.

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RE: Cameroon top exporter of Malware: McAfee
McAfee's conclusion is really of importance to Windows Users ; as the majority of the malware out there is targeted at Windows users. I have decided to 'get the target off my back' by getting rid of Windows .

I am loving the switch to Ubuntu; but YMMV.

This choice may not work for others, but, after considering the malware ecosystem out there, and the applications I use; Windows looked like a piece of Swiss cheese from a security standpoint. I am tired of the performance hit AV and malware scanning programs put on a Windows system.
Posted by fatman65535
7th Dec 2009
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RE: Cameroon top exporter of Malware: McAfee
You should really change the title of this story. As written, it appears that the top exporter of Malware from Cameroon is McAfee. Make it unambiguous - use the convention of placing the source first, thus:

McAfee: Cameroon top exporter of Malware
Posted by yosh@...
7th Dec 2009
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