http://www.usatoday.com/tech/n...9-08-zombieprice_x.htm
http://www.linuxinsider.com/st...rce-Tactics-36476.html
All spammers must DIE!!
Going price for network of zombie PCs: $2,000-$3,000
In the calculus of Internet crime, two of the most sought-after commodities are zombie PCs and valid e-mail addresses.
One indication of the going rate for zombie PCs comes from a June 11 posting on SpecialHam.com, an electronic forum for spammers. The asking price for use of a network of 20,000 zombie PCs: $2,000 to $3,000. Such networks typically are used to broadcast spam and phishing scams and to spread e-mail viruses designed mainly to create yet more zombies.
Zombie networks can be sophisticated. Last fall, a small Internet service provider asked cybersleuth Don Bowman to find out which of its 70,000 subscribers were broadcasting spam. Its network was generating so much spam, other ISPs threatened to blacklist it.
Bowman discovered that e-mail would blast from 20 PCs for a brief period. After a pause, another fire-hydrant-like surge gushed from a different group of 20 PCs. On average, each machine disgorged 630 pieces of e-mail an hour. "It wasn't natural," says Bowman, chief software architect for security firm Sandvine. "No one can type that fast."
His conclusion: An intruder was deploying squads of zombies in rotating waves. Why? Probably so the unwitting zombie owner would tolerate performance slowdowns that came and went ? and investigate no further.
http://www.linuxinsider.com/st...rce-Tactics-36476.html
A common defense adopted by ISPs is to monitor activity on port 25, the port most commonly used by spammers to avoid an ISP's outbound mail servers and ship their annoying payloads directly to other ISP's inbound servers.
If an ISP sees an unusual volume of mail emanating from one of its users on port 25, it will turn off that user's access to the port.
The technique can be quite effective. After it began a program in June to shut down port 25 to spammers, Philadelphia-based Comcast (Nasdaq: CMCSK) Latest News about Comcast, the nation's largest broadband ISP, reduced unsolicited e-mail originating on its network by 80 percent, spokesperson Jeanne Russo told LinuxInsider.
All spammers must DIE!!
