India has ranked third on the list of the countries distributing spam
across the world, after US and China, a new report has claimed.
While the US was the single highest-ranking country in the study,
Asia topped the list of continents with 36.6 per cent of the world's
spam accounted for.
In the latter half of 2012, India had been leading the way but
has now fallen back to third, with China leapfrogging into second place
after a spell in the lower half of the list, statistics from SophosLabs
revealed.
US is still firmly on the top, distributing more spam than any
other country in the world, clocking in at a "respectable" 18.3 per cent
of junk email sent.
The study tracked the amount of spam sent between December 2012
and February 2013. China took the second spot and India the third, with
8.2 per cent and 4.2 per cent of the world's spam, respectively.
Other high-ranking countries included Peru, France, South Korea,
and Italy. North America ranked third, with a relatively diminutive 22
per cent, 'TechNewsDaily' reported.
After the top two, the spammers are distributing their activities fairly evenly across the rest of the list.
Stepping back and looking at spam relay from a continental
viewpoint shows Asia keeping the top spot that it has held for some time
now.
However, there has been a significant redistribution with a shift
from India to the US and a 12 per cent swing from Asia to North
America.
The list included USA (18.3 per cent) at number one, China (8.2
per cent) at number two. India (4.2 per cent) was placed third while
Peru (4.0 per cent) stood fourth in the list.
France (3.4 per cent), S Korea (3.4 per cent) and Italy (3.4 per
cent) were placed fifth on the list. Taiwan (2.9 per cent) and Russia
(2.9 per cent) were at the eighth position.
Spain (2.8 per cent), Germany (2.7 per cent) and Iran (2.6 per cent) were at tenth, eleventh and twelfth spot respectively.
Compromised user PCs are a huge avenue of spam distribution. In
order to stop spammers cold, everyday users can keep their anti-virus
software up to date, run regular malware checks, and update their
hard-to-guess passwords on a regular basis.
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