Unsolicited e-mail accounted for 90.4% of all messages received on corporate networks during April, an increase of 5.1% from
a month earlier, according to a report released May 26 by Symantec Corp.'s MessageLabs Intelligence unit.
The monthly MessageLabs report on threat trends also found that nearly 58% of all spam can be traced to botnets.
Adam O'Donnell, a researcher at Cloudmark Inc., a provider of antispam tools, noted that in addition to using botnets, spammers
in recent months have been experimenting with a new way to sneak unwanted email past corporate filters.
Often, he said, a spammer will rent legitimate network services, often in an Eastern European country, and then blast a large
amount of spam at the network of a specific ISP. The idea is to push as many messages as possible onto the network before
any kind of filtering software detects the incident. O'Donnell estimates that hundreds of thousands of such messages are sent
each day without detection.
Social networks are also becoming an increasingly important tool for spammers.
Security experts note that social-networking spam can't be filtered at the corporate firewall and appears to come from friends
of the recipients.
For more enterprise computing news, visit Computerworld. Story copyright Computerworld, Inc.