Webroot State of Spyware Report
On a flight from San Franciso to Washington Dulles I managed to read the latest State of Spyware report from Webroot Software. I'm not sure how I got the heavy printed version. Maybe it was sent courtesy of Richard Stiennon, who is Vice President of Threat Research. (That's an interesting title.)
I thought the report was useful. It provides a broad look at spyware, and specifics on several examples. It contains an excellent section on spyware-related legislation. The report provides plenty of background for management who need justification to spend money on spyware defenses. I even bought into the idea that automated spyware defenses are required.
>On a related note, the Symantec Internet Security Threat Report Volume VIII is available for download. I have not read this one yet. It is a huge .pdf though. I believe a report like that complements material from organizations like Webroot. Symantec takes a broader look at Internet threats. It also examines vulnerabilities (which we know are not threats).
I thought the report was useful. It provides a broad look at spyware, and specifics on several examples. It contains an excellent section on spyware-related legislation. The report provides plenty of background for management who need justification to spend money on spyware defenses. I even bought into the idea that automated spyware defenses are required.
>On a related note, the Symantec Internet Security Threat Report Volume VIII is available for download. I have not read this one yet. It is a huge .pdf though. I believe a report like that complements material from organizations like Webroot. Symantec takes a broader look at Internet threats. It also examines vulnerabilities (which we know are not threats).
Comments
The risk of using these tools is that pointy headed managers will assume they catch *all* bad code, and won't fund other defenses. Then they get 0wned.
These tools should come with warning labels. They are only part of a good defense.