Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Computing
  3. News

McAfee report sees ransomeware surge, praises Adobe for its response

Add as a preferred source on Google

Adobe has become a “gold standard” for responding to vulnerabilities, according to the latest McAfee Labs Threat Report, with the company patching most threats within one day.

In Q1 2015, 42 new Adobe Flash vulnerabilities were submitted to the National Vulnerability Database, and within 24 hours, Adobe patched them all, says McAfee Labs.

Recommended Videos

Adobe Flash vulnerabilities have always been common, but in Q1, new Adobe Flash malware grew a staggering 317 percent, from 47,000 samples in late 2014 to 200,000 now. McAfee Labs’ report says that cybercriminals have moved away from Java and Microsoft Silverlight vulnerabilities in favor of exploiting un-patched Adobe Flash vulnerabilities, but the company has responded accordingly, says the report’s authors.

“When we look at how quickly some organizations take to patch things, actually you’re getting a complete plethora of responses. I mean in certain cases we’ve actually seen where organizations haven’t even responded to security researchers when they’ve identified vulnerabilities in their platforms,” Raj Samani, EMEA CTO at McAfee, tells Digital Trends.

“If we look at the number of targeted attacks going after say Adobe, and specifically Flash vulnerabilities, the reality is with what we said with the gold standard, it really is that,” he says. “There’s a whole multitude of different kinds of responses but certainly Adobe appears to be way ahead of everybody else.”

Other companies were praised for offering attractive bug bounty programs in the face of a burgeoning market for zero days on the dark web, where vendors are selling off research from the security industry and making potential profits. “Are the bug bounties going to be anywhere near what someone can sell a zero day for? At the moment it doesn’t appear to be,” adds Samani. “We’re seeing certain organizations taking a very responsible approach regarding paying researchers, recognizing researchers, and I think it’s important to do that.”

Despite certain companies patching their software as swiftly as possible, there is still a culture of poor responses in the industry. “There’s a multitude of horror stories out there,” says Samani.

Intel Security's Raj Samani
Intel Security’s Raj Samani Security & Defence Agenda/Flickr

The report adds that overall there’s been a huge growth in malware, especially ransomware, with a couple of high-profile new samples hitting the scene. Ransomware grew 165 percent in the first quarter of 2015. The report credits this to the rise of major new ransomware families, CTB-Locker and Teslacrypt, along with updated versions of older strains like CryptoWall and TorrentLocker.

Ransomware has grown in popularity as people have become more amendable to paying, explains Samani, and its authors are more likely to target victims in richer countries. “The returns are really, really good,” he says. “If you’re looking at the specific threat actor being involved in cybercrime, their motive is to make money, then ransomware is a pretty profitable approach for them.”

CTB-Locker was one of the prevalent samples in the quarter. CTB stands for Curve, Tor, Bitcoin, with curve referring to the malware’s cryptography based on elliptical curves while the attacker’s control servers are placed on Tor and the ransom is listed in Bitcoin. The report anticipates that ransomware samples like this will continue to grow in the future.

McAfee Labs found that most other threats are either on the rise or holding steady from the previous report. The number of new mobile malware samples soared by 49 percent from Q4 2014 to Q1 2015.

“The number of total malware samples we’ve currently got in our zoo has hit 400 million. The total number of threats that we’re seeing are 362 per minute, which is about six every second,” explains Samani. “Basically what that means is within our malware zoo, we’ve now just hit the 400 million figure. That’s a 13 percent increase from Q4 2014 to Q1 2015.”

Jonathan Keane
Jonathan is a freelance technology journalist living in Dublin, Ireland. He's previously written for publications and sites…
AI tools that help students cheat are multiplying, and the detectors can’t keep up
A New York Times report has found that cheating tools are evolving faster than the software meant to catch AI writing.
GPTZero website on a laptop

A wave of new apps marketed on TikTok and YouTube is making it nearly impossible for teachers to tell whether students are actually writing their own homework or offloading it to AI. The New York Times reports that tools known as humanizers and autotypers have closed the gap that used to give AI-written homework away, and that the same companies selling detection software are sometimes the ones helping students get around it.

The tools work around the checks teachers rely on

Read more
This monstrous ASUS gaming laptop costs as much as three new MacBook Pros
Asus’ flagship gaming laptop is back, bigger, brighter, and wildly expensive.
ASUS ROG Strix Scar 18 Computex 2026

Following up on the ROG Strix Scar 18 (2025)'s impressive act, ASUS has built a successor that looks even more ridiculous if you glance at the spec sheet. The ROG Strix Scar 18 (2026) is not a cute little café laptop. The flagship gaming machine is built around a large 18-inch 4K miniLED display and hardware that embarrasses most desktop PCs.

But all of this comes at a cost, and you might want to sit down for this one.

Read more
ASUS fanboys can now spend $16,578 on its 20th anniversary gaming gear
ASUS ROG Family Bucket Collector’s Edition Featured

ASUS’ Republic of Gamers brand is celebrating its 20th anniversary by bringing a five-figure collection of its coolest gaming hardware. The company just revealed pricing for its ROG 20th Anniversary Family Bucket Collector’s Edition, a monster bundle that costs 112,026 yuan, or roughly $16,578. The collection is apparently selling through an offline flash sale in Shanghai from June 20 to July 19, with buyers being selected through a lottery system.

This is more than your typical PC upgrade. ASUS is selling you the whole ROG lifestyle starter pack, which will attract collectors after their next limited edition bundle.

Read more