Published: March 15, 2010
MarkMonitor Year in Review Report Shows How Rising Rates of Online Brand Abuse Are Used to Monetize Web Traffic
SAN FRANCISCO - (BUSINESS WIRE) - MarkMonitor, the global leader in enterprise brand
protection, today released the company's latest Brandjacking
Index, which finds that online brand abuse rose across major
industries in 2009. The report also reveals the total number of phishing
attacks was at an all-time high, with attacks targeting social network
sites increasing to represent two percent of all phish attacks in 2009.
The report spotlights the techniques and scams used by fraudsters and
cybercriminals to monetize Web traffic using well-known brands as the
lure.
Brand abuse increased across all industry categories measured by the
Index with the automotive and media industries drawing the most abuse.
Abuse targeting luxury brands demonstrated the greatest increase,
growing 23 percent year-over-year, followed by abuse targeting apparel
brands which grew 14 percent year-over-year. For the third straight year cybersquatting,
the method of using brands in bad faith within the domain name system,
continued to be the most prevalent form of brand abuse. In addition,
phish attacks reached a new record high with 565,502 attacks in 2009,
growing 62 percent over 2008's total.
"MarkMonitor Brandjacking Index: 2009 - The Year in Review" measures the
effect of online threats to brands quarter-over-quarter throughout 2009.
The Brandjacking Index investigates trends, including drilled-down
analysis of how the most popular brands are abused online and the
industries in which abuse is causing the most damage. The report
examines how brandjacking tactics - such as cybersquatting, false
association, pay per click scams, offensive content, and phishing - have
changed over the past year.
"As scammers continually seek new methods of monetizing traffic, brands
face a growing and pervasive problem from online abuse," said Frederick
Felman, chief marketing officer, MarkMonitor. "With billions of dollars
worth of e-commerce sales, intellectual property and online marketing
investments at stake, companies need to take proactive roles in fighting
brand abuse online now more than ever."
Brandjackers cast a wide net
-
The luxury industry saw the greatest increase of brand abuse, growing
23 percent year over year.
-
Media and automotive brands attract the greatest amount of brand abuse
by volume.
-
Brand abuse targeting the apparel industry grew 14 percent
year-over-year.
-
Brand abuse involving an e-commerce component increased by 39 percent
in the, consumer packaged goods industry and by 60 percent in the
luxury industry.
Cybersquatting on the rise
-
Cybersquatting continues as the most prevalent brand abuse technique,
growing eight percent from 2008.
-
Online advertising abuses are more targeted and harder to identify.
-
Fraudsters are coordinating the use of multiple methods to conduct
brand abuse.
United States leads in hosting brandjacking web sites
-
While brand abuse is prevalent throughout the world, for the third
straight year the United States, Germany and the United Kingdom are
home to the majority of brandjacking web sites.
-
69 percent of web sites that host brand abuse are hosted in the United
States. Germany hosts seven percent followed by the United Kingdom at
five percent.
Phish attacks at all-time high
-
The number of organizations phished for the first time decreased, with
only 33 percent of 2009's total being first-time targets. However, the
number of phish attacks reached an all-time high, with 598 phish
attacks per organization, indicating fraudsters are being more
targeted with their attacks.
-
Phish attacks reached a new record high with 565,502 attacks in 2009,
increasing 62 percent from 2008.
-
Phishing attacks targeting payment services brands grew 154 percent in
2009, increasing to 37 percent of the total by industry in 2009 from
24 percent in 2008.
-
Attacks targeting financial brands grew 36 percent in 2009, but
declined to 40 percent of the total by industry in 2009 from 48
percent in 2008.
-
2009 phish attacks targeting social network brands numbered 11,240,
growing 376 percent from 2008.
-
Phish attacks targeting social network brands represented two percent
of all phish attacks in 2009.
-
The U.S. retained the top position for hosting the largest amount of
phishing attacks, increasing its share of phish to 44.7 percent in
2009 from 36.5 percent in 2008.
-
Canada, Germany and Korea increased in position from 2008 to 2009.
North America held the top spot, increasing to 51.2 percent in 2009
from 40.3 percent in 2008.
Methodology
The Brandjacking Index is an independent report produced by MarkMonitor
that tracks and analyzes online abuses of leading brands. The
cornerstone of the report is the volume of public data analyzed by
MarkMonitor using the company's proprietary algorithms - no customer
data or proprietary customer information is used to create the
Brandjacking Index. This year, MarkMonitor introduced a new measurement
for cybersquatting, gauging the persistence of these sites during the
study period.
During the study period, MarkMonitor searched approximately 134 million
public records daily for brand abuse in domain data. In addition,
MarkMonitor analyzes spam feeds from leading international Internet
Service Providers (ISPs), email providers and other alliance partners to
detect phishing and other fraud. The company has analyzed billions of
web pages since 2004 and processes up to 30 million suspected URLs daily.
About MarkMonitor
MarkMonitor, the global leader in enterprise brand protection, offers
comprehensive solutions and services that safeguard brands, reputation
and revenue from online risks. With end-to-end solutions that address
the growing threats of online fraud, brand abuse and unauthorized
channels, MarkMonitor enables a secure Internet for businesses and their
customers. The company's exclusive access to data combined with its
patented real-time prevention, detection and response capabilities
provide wide-ranging protection to the ever-changing online risks faced
by brands today. For more information, visit www.markmonitor.com
Note to Editors
For complete Brandjacking Index results or more information concerning
methodology, contact Te Smith at 831-818-1267 / te.smith@markmonitor.com
or Monica Walsh at 650-762-2894 / mwalsh@ar-edelman.com.
MarkMonitor and Brandjacking Index are registered trademarks of
MarkMonitor Inc. All other trademarks included herein are the property
of their respective owners.

MarkMonitor
Te Smith, 831-818-1267 (mobile)
te.smith@markmonitor.com
or
A&R
Edelman for MarkMonitor
Monica Walsh, 650-762-2894 (office)
650-219-3220
(mobile)
monica.walsh@ar-edelman.com
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