2010 Predictions: the Year of a Major Social Networking Security Breach?
Monday December 28, 2009 at 10:34 pm CST
Posted by David Marcus
With the New Year just days away, it’s time for McAfee Labs 2010 Threat Predictions. What should you be wary of in the coming year? Social networks.
Sites such as Twitter and Facebook have changed the way we communicate, interact, and share on the web. As user bases for the top online social destinations reach record highs, cybercriminals are building out their criminal toolkits, taking advantage of new technologies, third-party applications, and hotspots of activity to exploit users.
What does this mean for the average surfer? Next time you receive an invite from one of your “Facebook friends” to play a game that looks like it’s shaping up to be the next Farmville, think twice before you click. In 2010, users are going to be more vulnerable to attacks that blindly distribute fake apps across their networks. The same goes for bit.ly’s and TinyURLs. As abbreviated URLs become more ubiquitous, it will be even easier for cybercriminals to mask and direct users to malicious sites.
Speaking of ubiquity: McAfee Labs predicts that Adobe will overtake Microsoft as the No. 1 target for cybercriminals in 2010. Adobe products—in particular Acrobat Reader and Flash—have become two of the most widely used apps in the world, and cybercriminals go where the masses go. Cybercriminals will have a field day preying on people using Adobe software.
McAfee also believes the following will play a critical role in 2010:
- Banking Trojans will become even more sophisticated. They showed some firepower in 2009—easily getting around current protections used by banks—but next year they will reach a new level with the ability to interrupt legitimate transactions and make unauthorized withdrawals, while flying under the radar.
- Malware via email attachments will increase, especially targeting corporations, journalists, and individuals
- Botnets, the infrastructure that launches nearly every type of cyberattack, will adopt a peer-to-peer architecture, connecting computer to computer without a centralized control point—making it more difficult for cybersecurity professionals to detect them
- HTML 5 and the evolution of the programming language will give cybercriminals new opportunities to write malware and prey on users
Countering these trends, in 2010 McAfee predicts a good year for law enforcement and the ability to identify, track, and combat cybercrime worldwide. After a decade of cybersecurity research, coordination, and training undertaken by agencies across the globe, the community will reap the benefits of the effort put forth over the past ten years.
McAfee Labs serves up the details on its threat predictions in the full report. Surf the web cautiously in 2010!
(We must correct one oversight: Our colleague Pedro Bueno was one of the authors of the report. His name was inadvertantly left off the document. Thanks, Pedro!)

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