翡翠满阳绿什么档次:Half of China's Internet attacks came from fo...

来源:百度文库 编辑:中财网 时间:2024/04/30 23:36:09

Half of China's Internet attacks came from foreign countries

(People's Daily Online)

15:03, August 10, 2011

Nearly half of Internet attacks China encountered in 2010 came from foreign countries, and the cross-border character of Internet security incidents has become increasingly conspicuous, according to news from the annual meeting held by the China National Computer Network Emergency Technical Team (CNCERT) in Dalian on Aug. 9.

In 2010, the CNCERT detected 480,000 IPs with Trojan horse viruses, of which 221,000 were from foreign counties. The United States was the largest source country, accounting for 14.7 percent and India was second, accounting for 8 percent.

In addition, the CNCERT also detected 13,782 IPs with botnet viruses in 2010, of which 6,531 were from foreign counties and the top three countries were the United States, 21.7 percent; India, 7.2 percent, and Turkey, 5.7 percent.

Moreover, according to statistics reported by the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology, over half of malicious domain names that conducted Trojan horse attacks and "phishing" attacks in China in 2010 were registered overseas.


Email|Print|Comments(Editor:张洪宇)

Increases the bookmark

  • twitter
  • facebook
  • Sina Microblog
  • digg
  • Google
  • Delicious
  • buzz
  • friendfeed
  • Linkedin
  • diigo
  • reddit
  • stumbleupon
  • Qzone
  • QQ Microblog

Related Reading

  1. Expert: China among biggest victims of Internet attacks

Leave your comment0 comments

  1. Name

Weekly review

  1. The week in pictures(July 31-Aug.6,2011)
  2. Chinese-American ambassador to China key to boosting ties
  3. Why is Japan sounding 'China threat' alarm again?
  4. Political negotiations needed to end Libya deadlock
  5. China should adhere to scientific outlook on development
  6. Chinese-American ambassador to China key to boosting ties
  7. People's Daily website revamps English version
  8. Report: China's urban middle-income class growing