Spyware and adware have made inroads into the enterprise. The infection rate of malicious spyware at companies is approximately seven percent, and adware appears on 52 percent of machines, according to anti-spyware software developer Webroot.
The report, "The State of Spyware," intends to act as a baseline on spyware information, with quarterly updates planned. Webroot breaks out four kinds of "spyware": adware, cookies, system monitors and Trojans. The study does not attempt to differentiate between the degrees of benefit or harm associated with each category.
Results come from self-selected clients of Webroot's Corporate SpyAudit software. Scans from over 35,300 systems, representing over 18,000 companies, showed the installation rate of all these program and file types is 87 percent.
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Second in the findings is adware, at 52 percent, down from 70 percent at the end of last year. Each computer containing adware has an average 3.6 instances running. The most troublesome forms of spyware, system monitors and Trojans, were present at the enterprise level but only found on seven percent of computers. Malicious forms of spyware are less common on enterprise than on consumer machines due to firewalls and company initiatives.
"Three to five percent of enterprise machines have keystroke loggers present," said Steinnon.

June 6, 2012
1:00pm ET / 10:00am PT
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