The number of keyloggers unleashed by hackers exploded this year, soaring by 65 percent in 2005 as e-criminals rush to steal identities and information, a security intelligence firm said Tuesday.
"The overall number of keyloggers has just skyrocketed this year," said Ken Dunham, senior engineer with Reston, Va.-based VeriSign iDefense. "It's all part of the last year's, 18 months' change in motive toward crimeware."
Keyloggers are small programs, silently installed by the attacker, typically after an earlier attack that compromised the computer through a vulnerability in the operating system or Internet browser, that record all or selected keystrokes, then sends that data to the hacker.
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