Red China
2007-03-19 20:06:24
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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2016-08-21 09:58:32
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answer #2
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answered by ? 3
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"Enjoy the beaches of Tokelau, however, beware the South Pacific island nation's Web sites."
That's the message from security software company McAfee, which released a survey Monday ranking the world's most dangerous Web addresses. McAfee says more than 10% of all Web sites registered out of Tokelau, identifiable by the ".tk" at the end of their Web address, will expose users to spam, viruses and spyware.
McAfee's survey was based on data from SiteAdvisor, a Boston-based company that the security company bought last April. SiteAdvisor's free online tool assigns Web sites a safety score based on whether they send spam, infect surfers with malicious programs or deliver excessive pop-up ads.
The new survey distinguishes sites based on their domain registration, which shows up as the last two or three letters in a Web address: Brazilian sites, for instances, end in ".br", while sites registered by academic groups tend to end in ".edu". McAfee says it looked at 8.1 million heavily trafficked Web sites registered at 265 different domains.
The result is a unique travel guide for Web surfers. Among larger countries, Romania and Russia topped the most dangerous list, with 5.6% and 4.5% of their sites ranked as risky. The safest countries were Ireland and Finland, which both had risk factors of 0.1%.
But a site's registration only tells users so much. In fact, it may not say much at all: Just about anyone can register any Web site with any domain name. And the most common domain name is one of the riskiest: About 6% of ".com" domains are questionable, McAfee says. The riskiest generic domain name of all is ".info"; sites there have a 7.5% chance of being dangerous.
What makes a domain more appealing to the Web's evil-doers? Price and anonymity. Spammers must constantly change domains to avoid filtering and blacklisting by e-mail service providers, anti-spam programs and Internet service providers. Registration costs, while often less then $10 a site, quickly multiply. That's why Tokelau, which gives out domains for free, may be a popular hideout for dubious sites.
The World's Riskiest Web Domains:
No. 1: Tokelau (.tk)
No. 2: Information (.info)
No. 3: Samoa (.ws)
No. 4: Romania (.ro)
No. 5: Commercial (.com)
No. 6: Business (.biz)
No. 7: Russia (.ru)
No. 8: Network (.net)
No. 9: Families and Individuals (.name)
No. 10: Slovakia (.sk)
2007-03-19 22:09:50
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answer #3
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answered by D M L 4
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Well, I would say the United States, b/c there are more computers per person, thus more hackers, spammers, and virus creaters.
2007-03-19 20:11:16
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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Asia
2007-03-19 20:09:02
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answer #5
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answered by chillipope 7
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I would guess its a toss up between USA and eastern Europe,
sorry cant find any references
2007-03-19 22:36:09
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answer #6
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answered by ? 4
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the usa
http://www.howstuffworks.com/virus2.htm
2007-03-19 21:17:21
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answer #7
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answered by defragmentedbrain 4
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think every place in the world except for the antarctic.... nah, probably there's a hacker even there.
2007-03-19 20:11:35
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answer #8
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answered by Dirac 2
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