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From
a minor annoyance for home-PC users Spyware is becoming a major
difficulty for enterprise environments around the world, says IDC.
SpyWare (also known as AdWare, MalWare, ScumWare, and a host of
other sordid names) is infecting millions of computers with multiple
purposes: stealing personal information, enabling identity theft,
tracking users' online activity, and selling the information back
to anyone willing to pay. According to new IDC research, the need
to identify and eradicate these parasitic programs will drive AntiSpyWare
software revenues from $12 million in 2003 to $305 million in 2008.
Although not always malicious in nature, SpyWare still causes significant
damage to legitimate software, network performance, and employee
productivity. Moreover, it crosses the boundary between security
and system management by deluging Help Desks with a siege of employee
complaints about pop-up advertisements, applications failures, and
poor PC performance.
At worst, SpyWare's ability to track keystrokes, scan hard drives,
and change system and registry settings is a tremendous personal
and enterprise security threat. These activities can lead to identity
theft, data corruption, and even theft of company trade secrets.
"Today, more malicious SpyWare can easily infiltrate corporate
firewalls," said Brian Burke, research manager, Security Products
at IDC. "These programs make their way into the corporate Intranet
under the guise of less-threatening network traffic and, once in,
they can wreak havoc."
Key findings from IDC's study of the SpyWare market include the
following:
* SpyWare is often bundled with legitimate programs, allowing it
to easily pass through firewalls uncontested
* A recent IDC survey of over 600 organisations listed SpyWare as
the fourth-greatest threat to a company's enterprise network security
* IDC estimates that 67 percent of all computers have some form
of SpyWare installed
* Rising SpyWare threats and increasing demand for protection have
forced established security vendors to build, buy, or partner with
standalone antiSpyWare vendors.
In the comprehensive study, Worldwide SpyWare 2004-2008 Forecast
and Analysis: Security and System Management Sharing Nightmares
(IDC #32229), IDC defines the SpyWare security threat and its repercussions
as well as forecasts the potential market. It examines the key players
in the market and provides insight and analysis on products and
solutions poised to have an impact.
To purchase this study, call IDC Sales at 508-988-7988 or email
sales@idc.com

•Date:
1st Dec 2004 • Region: N.America / World •Type:
Article •Topic:
ISM
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