A variety of malware threats, rather than one specific virus, dominated the
security landscape this February, according to security firm
BitDefender.
However, the company said that all the threats in its Top 10 Malware List for
February used the same packing method to obfuscate the payload.
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"Virus writers use packers to decrease the size of the virus and to increase
the cost of analysis," said Sorin Dudea, head of BitDefender AV Research.
"Unpacking something packed in an as-yet unknown manner takes a lot of time
and skill."
Malware using this single packing method accounted for 37.02 per cent of all
detections in February.
The Peed/Storm Trojan dominated the list at 16.88 per cent of total
detections for the month. This was a strong resurgence given the Trojan's
absence from the January list.
Virus writers use packers to decrease the size of the virus and increase the cost of analysis
Sorin Dudea Head, BitDefender AV Research
The proliferation of the Windows WMF vulnerability appeared to decrease
during the month, as viruses using its signature accounted for only 5.33 per
cent of total detections.
Lower on the list are a host of much older mass mailer viruses, which Dudea
described as "on their way to irrelevancy".
These viruses account for approximately six per cent of total detections,
more than half of which are a result of Netsky.P.
"By this point, I think it is safe to say that Netsky.P is the most
widespread mass mailer virus of all time," said Dudea.
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