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FBI Releases Results of Operation Bot Roast

coondoggie writes to tell us that the FBI has released the findings of their recent botnet study and have identified over 1 million botnet crime victims. "The FBI is working with industry partners, including the Computer Emergency Response Team Coordination Center at Carnegie Mellon University, to notify the victim owners of the computers. Microsoft and the Botnet Task Force have also helped out the FBI. Through this process the FBI may uncover additional incidents in which botnets have been used to facilitate other criminal activity, the FBI said in a statement.Bots are widely recognized as one of the top scourges of the industry. Gartner predicts that by year-end 75% of enterprises 'will be infected with undetected, financially motivated, targeted malware that evaded traditional perimeter and host defenses.'"

4 of 189 comments (clear)

  1. Why not shut them down? by DamonHD · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I would have thought that a nice call from the FBI to the CxOs of the main appropriate ISPs and a selection of those users on the fastest connections (ie with the most capacity to be damaging) would have a salutary effect.

    And then a follow up with negligence-related charges for those who refused to give a f**k maybe?

    Rgds

    Damon

    --
    http://m.earth.org.uk/
  2. And here come the phishers.... by HTH+NE1 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Anyone else think this will start a new wave of phishing where botnet controllers send e-mail messages out forged as coming from FBI.gov to people telling them their machines are infected with bots (linking to the URL in parent) and that they need to install the program attached to the e-mail that is claimed to remove the offending software but in fact turns your machine into another zombie?

    --
    Oh, say does that Star-Spangled Banner entwine / The myrtle of Venus with Bacchus's vine?
  3. Re:Botnet by DragonWriter · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Botnets were never a problem until Microsoft Windows became ubiquitous.


    Windows was ubiquitous long before botnets became a problem.

    Botnets became a problem as full-time internet access by unsophisticated home users became more ubiquitous, and Windows was the primary target because it was the main OS used by the targeted users. If there had been a Mac OS or Linux monoculture instead, people would have been tricked into install malicious software on those platforms instead.
  4. Re:It's good to see the FBI getting a clue. by dedazo · · Score: 4, Insightful

    This is a Windows problem and the relative risks should be published.

    I don't know what "the relative risks" means, but since none of my Windows machines are in a botnet, and there are millions and millions of them that are not, this is not a Windows problem. It's a basic user education problem. Windows may have more attack vectors than other OSes, but that doesn't mean they are not known or are impossible to avoid. Simple common sense goes a long way. People get infected with botware because they download things they shouldn't or don't bother to keep their machines up to date by turning on automatic updates so they don't have to worry about anything.

    If you think one chmod +x is an insurmountable obstacle to turning your shiny Linux or OS X box into a bot, remember that people get infected by executables in password protected ZIP files and that all of the most massively distributed worms have all required significant user intervention to propagate. Maybe one of these days you'll inherit 800 million completely clueless users, and maybe then you'll call it a "Linux problem"?

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