Hi Everyone, Given my background in Risk, Security & Fraud Prevention I thought I'd chime in. :-) I've seen this document before; it's an interesting read, but the data (in my view) is questionable. While McAfee is very strong when it comes to antivirus - malware presents a completely different scenario. Without getting into a technical discussion, the reality is that antivirus scanners fall short when it comes to identifying and cleaning up malware. What the document does outline is that "ease of registration" is _one factor_ in risk management. Certainly, organised crime and "state sponsored activities" are common in countries that don't have strong registrant checks. This is also why I support strong controls and their associated policies in .au If you want a "real world" view of the "riskiest countries", take a look at https://zeustracker.abuse.ch/statistic.php. This ranks Zeus malware by "hosting countries". It counts the number of hosts and files online. Here are the top hosting countries right now: 1. US 2. Russia *RU 3. Ukraine (UA) 4. Czech Republic (CZ) 5. Moldova, Republic of (MD) Here are countries by "number of files online" 1. Russian Federation (RU) 2. Ukraine (UA) 3. China (CN) 4. United Kingdom (GB) 5. United States (US) 6. Kazakhstan (KZ) 7. Czech Republic (CZ) 8. Moldova, Republic of (MD) 9. *Australia* (AU) 10. Mexico (MX) Note that Australia currently ranks in 9th place (in terms of highest risk). Obviously this changes over time, depending on infection rates. This 9th place for Australia is only because of one particular infection in .au. The point being its difficult to gather enough "statistically relevant" data in the first instance. In summary, registrant checks are one _very small_ part of the equation. An unpatched webserver can just as easily drive up the numbers. I hope this helps give you a different perspective. Kind regards, Simon Johnson Co-Founder - Domainer Income Web: DomainerIncome.com <http://www.domainerincome.com> - DomainerIncome TV <http://www.domainerincome.tv> - SimonJohnson.co <http://www.simonjohnson.co> Follow Me: Twitter <http://www.twitter.com/domainerincome> | Facebook <http://www.facebook.com/domainer> | Linkedin <http://au.linkedin.com/in/domaining> | Skype <skype:domainerincome?call> | On 27/10/2010 11:46 AM, Brett Fenton wrote: > It is George, but you need to be careful in simply drawing the conclusion > domain policy=security. > > For example NZ rated as marginally more secure, and they have a completely > open domain policy ie the same as .com, or I could pick out say .ie which has > an open second level but criteria around domain use, or Germany (.de) which is > rated marginally less secure. > > I'd argue having a strong regulator participating in all levels of the space > would have more to do with the ranking than the existing policy. Wait did I > just say something good about auDA? > > Regards, > Brett > >> Given that the current Names Panel is reviewing .au policy, this article is >> quite topical. http://us.mcafee.com/en-us/local/docs/Mapping_Mal_Web.pdf >> >> .au ranks amongst the safest in the world. >> >> Best Regards, >> >> George Pongas >> .au Services Manager >> AusRegistry Pty Ltd >> Level 8, 10 Queens Road >> Melbourne. Victoria. Australia. 3004. >> Ph: +61 3 9866 3710 >> Fax: +61 3 9866 1970 >> Email: George.Pongas§ausregistry.com.au >> Web: www.ausregistry.com.au<http://www.ausregistry.com.au/> >> >> The information contained in this communication is intended for the named >> recipients only. It is subject to copyright and may contain legally >> privileged and confidential information and if you are not an intended >> recipient you must not use, copy, distribute or take any action in >> reliance on it. If you have received this communication in error, please >> delete all copies from your system and notify us immediately. > --------------------------------------------------------------------------- > List policy, unsubscribing and archives => http://dotau.org/ > -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: <http://lists.cynosure.com.au/mailman/private/dns/attachments/20101027/9646396b/attachment-0001.html>Received on Tue Oct 26 2010 - 18:30:03 UTC
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