Gamers targeted by hackers

Kaspersky Lab made the obervation that PC gamers (globally) were hit by 11.7 million attacks in 2013. Currently Kaspersky Lab knows of 4.6 million pieces of gaming-focused malware, with an average, users of 34,000 attacks related to gaming malware taking place daily.



Russian gamers were the worst hit of all, as hackers made 8,813,050 attempts on them throughout 2013. Vietnam was in second with 503,947, followed by China on 376,058 reports PC World:

”Gaming has an ever-increasing fanbase, which also means that the number of potential victims for cybercriminals is rising as well. The cybercriminals are taking a lot of effort into their attacks and we can see the upsurge in sophistication. Especially in times like Christmas, when a lot of new games are being released, gamers need to be attentive stay secure,” said Christian Funk, senior virus analyst with the Global Research and Analysis Team at Kasperksy Lab.Underground forums are ridden with cybercrooks selling access to people’s gaming accounts, such as the portal and marketplace Steam.

The market for usernames and passwords is fuelled by attacks on the gaming companies themselves. Earlier this year, Kaspersky Lab detected a major espionage campaign on a range of massively multiplayer online games makers, with source code and other valuable data stolen. Malware types target specific games, such as the popular Minecraft. Earlier this year, a fake Minecraft tool built with Java promised to give the player powers such as banning other users, but was stealing usernames and passwords in the background.

When Grand Theft Auto V landed earlier this year, various sites offered fake downloads to access the record-smashing game for free. But when users tried to get the game, they received malware—a classic example of powerful names getting abused to lure victims into downloading malicious code.

Then there are typical scams, like phishing. Slews of emails are sent around every time a big gaming launch happens, and at Christmas, attempting to lure users into handing over data or money with the promise of discounts or cheap gaming goods.

Advice for safe gaming

Here are Kaspersky Lab’s top tips for gaming security:

Gamers targeted by hackers


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