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Avast: 1 out of 8 malware attacks come from USB devices

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Avast has published a blog post warning computer users about the increasing number of malware
attacks targeting USB drives and Windows' AutoRun feature
. During the last week of October, the security company recorded some 700,000 attacks on computers that voluntarily submitted data, and one out of every eight (13.5%) came from USB devices

"AutoRun is a really useful tool, but it is also a way to spread more than two-thirds of current malware," said Virus Lab analyst Jan Sirmer. Cyber-criminals are preying on people's natural inclination to share files with family, friends and coworkers via USB-attached memory, which is in handheld consoles, cell phones, digital cameras and portable music players.

Avast says its anti-virus software thwarted 84% of the USB/AutoRun related attacks with an on-access scan, while the remaining 16% were detected full drive scans. However, it was noted that detection rates could fall as storage devices grow in capacity. "A full scan can take up to an hour for a one terabyte device, so people will skip this entirely or just go for a quicker on-access scan." The firm offered a few pointers on keeping safe:

   1. Be aware. Around 60% of malware can now be spread via USB devices. This is an under-appreciated threat to home and business computers.
   2. Don't start attached. Turning on a PC with a USB device attached can result in malware being loaded directly to the computer ahead of some antivirus programs starting up.
   3. Scan first, look second. Make sure "on-access auto-scans" are enabled in in your antivirus program.
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