Spyware invasive programs that generate pop-ups, hijack home
pages, redirect searches and poison DNS files generates an
estimated $2bn in revenue a year1, according to a study
by anti-spyware firm Webroot. It estimates the surreptitious
spyware and adware market "may be approaching 25 per cent" of the
already-established market of online advertising.
As we've noted before, it's hard to square Webroot's $2n
estimate with the observable size of adware market. Webroot's This
calculation assumes a uniform distribution of spyware, among other
statistical sins. Estimates on the damage caused by computer
viruses are a notoriously inexact science. The same seems to apply
to looking at the adware market.
SpyAudit
In the first quarter of 2005, 88 per cent of scans using
Webroot's SpyAudit software found some form of unwanted program
(Trojan, system monitor, cookie or adware) on consumer computers.
The vast majority of corporate PCs (87 per cent) also harboured
undesirable programs or cookies. Excluding cookies, more than 55
per cent of corporate PCs contained unwanted programs. Infested
consumer PCs contained an average of 7.2 non-cookie infections.
Cookies annoy some people but they are nowhere near as serious a
problem as key-logging or Trojan horse programs. System monitor
(key-logger programs) were found in seven per cent of consumer and
enterprise PCs scanned using Webroot's software, down from 19 per
cent in Q4 2004. Trojan horse programs were found on 19 per cent of
consumer PCs and seven per cent of enterprise PCs, unchanged from
Q4 2004.
Consumer sites 'riddled' with spyware
Webroot's data comes from analysis of stats from Webroot's
consumer and corporate SpyAudit tools and from online research
culled by Phileas, Webroot's automated spyware research system.
Contrary to the perceived wisdom that spyware comes only from a
limited number of dodgy online porn and warez sites, Phileas
identified 4,294 sites (with almost 90,000 pages) containing some
form of spyware.
Webroot's State of Spyware report names and shames the top ten
most significant emerging spyware and adware threats based on
detection, as well as potential impact. CoolWebSearch, an infamous
piece of adware with over 100 different variants, was dubbed the
top threat. GAIN and 180search Assistant were the next two most
prevalent nuisances. ®
1 Webroot's figure for the value of the spyware
market comes from multiplying the average number of pieces of
adware per machines (4.38 - according to Webroot) times the number
of active users on the net (290m - according to Nielsen Netratings)
times the value of each adware installation per year ($2.25 - a
figure derived Claria's filing that it made $90m a year from 40m
"users").