 |
by ESET
> View this now
Published on: September 14, 2009
Type of content: WHITE PAPER
Format:
Unknown
Length: 14 pages
Price: FREE
Overview: Once upon a time, one infection by specific malware looked much like another infection, to an antivirus scanner if not to the naked eye. Even back then, virus naming wasn't very consistent between vendors. In 2009, though, the threat landscape looks very different. Viruses and other replicative malware, while far from extinct, pose a comparatively manageable problem compared to other threats with the single common characteristic of malicious intent.
Detection techniques such as generic signatures, heuristics and sandboxing have also changed the ways in which malware is detected and therefore how it is classified, confounding the old assumptions of a simple one-to-one relationship between a detection label and a malicious program. This presentation will explain how one-to-many, many-to-one, or many-to-many models are at least as likely as the old one-detection-per-variant model, why "Do you detect Win32/UnpleasantVirus.EG?" is such a difficult question to answer, and explain why exact indication is not a pre-requisite for detection and remediation of malware, and actually militates against the most effective use of analysis and development time and resources.

|
 |
> View Company Report
> View all content by this company
> Return to Search Results
STILL HAVE QUESTIONS?
|
 |