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UK Officially The Most Hacked Country

_Hellfire_ writes "Symantec's Internet Security Threat Report for the second half of 2004 says that the UK is leading the rest of the world with bot networks. The report states that "...25.2% [of bots] are located in the UK. That now puts the country ahead of the US (24.6%), China (7.8%), Canada (4.9%) and Spain (3.8%)". Symantec blames a sudden uptake of residential broadband connections without the awareness of the required security measures."

18 of 417 comments (clear)

  1. It's called a hardware NAT router by jabuzz · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Basically they should be made compulsary for all broadband connections. It is the plethora of cheap USB ADSL modems that are being offered free with connections that it causing the problem.

  2. As a Brit... by bobintetley · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I can definitely vouch for this, I personally witnessed some 20 odd pieces of malware duking it out on my brothers 2Mbit broadband to see who could relay the most spam.

    Since then, I've converted the majority of my friends and family to Debian and they haven't looked back.

  3. Even with the increase in broadband popularity... by tabkey12 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    that is a HUGE number of bots. I wonder if there is a greater penetration of computers in the UK into homes, which might explain this.

  4. required skills by lanc · · Score: 1, Interesting


    IMNSHO having a box on the net is nearly as sharp situation as driving a car - how about some computer-internet-licence if one wants to have one?

    Since you can spam (willing or not even knowing about it) or be a zombie for some hax0r-attacks, you should carry responsibility. At least partly.

    --
    "First they ignore you, then they laugh at you, then they attack you, then you win." -- Mahatma Gandhi
  5. Possibly because.. by rpozz · · Score: 1, Interesting

    Our retarded government is shoving broadband down everyone's throats. That means that tons and bloody tons of people are all getting broadband, without firewall software or proper instructions on how to use it.

  6. dear geeks: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    Please write a bot that does SETI@home or folding@home or something useful.

    All these bots are just doing email spamming anyways, and since it seems like thats the way its always going to be..... why not have clueless users' spare processing power go to something useful?

    Thanks.

  7. Re:UK rules OK by Ayaress · · Score: 2, Interesting

    You know, this is sort of like when the US comes out #1 in road accidents or gun crime or something bad like that. We tend not to celebrate. Look on the bright side: Your beer is better than ours. If it weren't so hard to find in my area, I'd drink nothing but Bass.

  8. Speaking as a non-hacked Brit by CdBee · · Score: 5, Interesting

    The situation really is bad..
    In the last year 512Kbs ADSL Broadband has tumbled in price to little more expensive than unmetered dial-up, and a lot of clueless types bought in

    Typical British ISPs provide a USB modem for ADSL or an Ethernet/USB Cable modem, and a driver/configurator disk. No consumer ISP provides a NAT router by default (its a costly option, and usually a crappy rebranded far-eastern product that crashes all the time).

    Very few of them even provide a software firewall. AOL is a notable exception (about time they did something right) providing a firewall in their standard AOL Broadband software.

    I spend a lot of my free time installing Zonealarm/Sygate Personal for clueless people wondering why their brand new XP box and brand new ADSL connection keep crashing....

    --
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    1. Re:Speaking as a non-hacked Brit by Ford+Prefect · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Typical British ISPs provide a USB modem for ADSL or an Ethernet/USB Cable modem, and a driver/configurator disk. No consumer ISP provides a NAT router by default (its a costly option, and usually a crappy rebranded far-eastern product that crashes all the time).

      I got a fairly decent NAT router with my ADSL account with a small UK ISP. They also block a variety of Windows-worm-attracting ports by default - you have to ask to get them unblocked, and then they'll run a quick port-scan on your system to make sure you're not a sitting duck.

      I've not actually needed any ports unblocking, and I'd class myself as a fairly advanced user. So why can't the big-name ISPs do this as well? Okay, it's not going to stop browser malware, email trojans and the like, but it'll definitely help against the nastier, faster-spreading worms...

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  9. Re:Too many Americans are still on modems... by farnz · · Score: 2, Interesting

    41% of British Internet connections are broadband or other always-on connections, and 4% use a mixture of access methods. Leaves 55% who are exclusively modem users.

  10. UK consumers by ScouseMouse · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Speaking as a UK consumer, it doesnt surprise me. Most of the people i deal with dont bother with a virus checker until they start having problems, and most viruses these days seem to be designed for creating botnets so try to not to hog resources, crash the computer or use too much bandwidth. If only other windows programs were so well designed :-) When I first got broadband (About 2 years ago?) , the ISP i use, (Pipex) offered a free virus checker and gave instructions on how to run it. They dont any more. Nor do anyone else. I personally think that no-one who manages their own computer and *doesnt* know when their virus checker was last updated shouldnt be allowed near the internet.

    1. Re:UK consumers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      As a UK citizen I think this is RUBBISH. I have grandma talking about computers, and bringing up buzzwords about firewalls and anti-virus, try have a conversation with someone about your computer and it won't be long before they ask what firewall or anti-virus you use, it seems to me that the general population is getting very well educated very quickly (and I'm not sure of the source).

  11. So is... by ArsonSmith · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Someone at Symantic retiring and they are trying to pump up the stock?

    Recent Symantic news:
    OSX Doom and gloom, Symantic will save you.

    Fire Fox doom and gloom Symantic will save you.

    Now this

    --
    Paying taxes to buy civilization is like paying a hooker to buy love.
  12. Maybe due to huge uptake in broadband in UK by iBod · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I recently read that over 40% of UK Internet connections were now broadband, and most of these became active within the last year.

    I think the broadband providers should offer a router with a suitable built-in hardware firewall as a standard part of the package (or failing that insist on you having an 'approved' router/modem with then necessary smarts, in the service contract).

    Unfortunately most of the domestic packages are still 'wires only'.

  13. WLAN security by chman · · Score: 2, Interesting

    The uptake of broadband and WiFi has been immense over the past 6 or so months. Where before I had no problems with WLAN coverage as mine was the only one on the street, now there's one eminating from every home. Just in the few surrounding roads there are dozens of wireless networks in place, and hardly any have even changed the SSID, let alone disabled broadcasting of it. Only a handful use any form of actual security, such as WEP.
    Even the people that should know better, such as my neighbour that claims to be an IT professional (if you're reading this, no. 14, TURN ON WEP AND CHANGE THE DAMN SSID!) have left their connections wide open.

    This isn't just a security issue though. It becomes a real annoyance when my PDA wants to connect to any of the unsecure networks within range, and won't even detect my own. Consumer WAPs should have SSID broadcasting off by default - it's only necessary for public access points - and consumers need to be made aware that these devices should not just be plugged in and used without putting in place decent security measures. The initial setup wizards should leave them with a far more secure network, because the reduction in performance from using WEP is nothing compared to having me use your ADSL for bittorrent downloads.

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    This comment was formatted for readability, but I forgot the line break tags
  14. Voluntary BOTNET by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    A friend of Mine bought a broadband ready WINXP laptop at XMAS and it was unpatched, she only had a modem so it took a week or two of occasional dialups for the machine to become completely unuseable, requiring a total reinstall.
    My Question : can she sue the store as the machine was not ready as it was unpatched?

    On a lighter note I have a ADSL + NAT - works ok now I routed the 3 backdoors to nonexistant machines.
    Presumably left in for rental comapanies and/ or the FEDs - two had default asswords one had a crypto call and reponse with a simple algorythm that Shimamora (of Mitnick fame) cracked.

    Still when they patch all of the windoz exploits I expect we'll see some automated broadcast UDP packet exploits - want a secure system TURN IT OFF - PULL OUT THE CABLE.

  15. UK almost hosted the world's biggest cyberheist by Madas · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I read here that bots in the UK nearly led to nearly half a billion dollars being siphoned off a Japanese bank.

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  16. not too surprised by jayloden · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I'm an American student studying abroad here in London, and one thing I have noticed is that port 25 isn't blocked outgoing at any of the places I've been online. While as a Linux user this is convenient because I can use my laptop's own smtp server to send mail without hassle, I'd rather they be blocking port 25 outgoing to prevent spam.

    If you don't have port 25 blocked, you can expect to see a hell of a lot of spam bots on your networks, because they'll be effective.

    -Jay