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By Dinesh C. Sharma
Posted on ZDNet News: Mar 3, 2004 7:22:00 PM

Worms are proving to be both a financial and managerial headache for Internet service providers.

Dealing with worms that travel over their networks could cost North American ISPs as much as $245 million in 2004, according to a study released Wednesday by peer-to-peer management company Sandvine. For service providers worldwide, the overall expense could reach $370 million. The totals include the cost of tactical response teams, swamped customer support resources, higher transit costs, and likely customer churn due to a loss of positive brand image over time.


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Sandvine estimated that, on any given day, between 2 percent and 12 percent of traffic on service provider networks is malicious. Even on networks with good security, malicious traffic accounts for 5 percent of all data.

In addition to dealing with event-related attacks triggered by worms like Slammer, Sobig and the recent MyDoom, ISPs have to contend with daily denial-of-service attacks and persistent low-level incursions from remnants of earlier worms still active on the PCs of residential subscribers.

All told, worms have become an operational preoccupation for network managers, in addition to being a drag on profits, Sandvine said.

"Worms exact a massive toll by forcing service providers to mobilize premium resources in order to quell attacks and protect the subscriber experience," Tom Donnelly, vice president of marketing and sales at Sandvine, said in a statement. "Uncovering the true costs and inefficiencies that worms impose on the broadband sector is crucial if we're going to identify appropriate solutions."

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  • Talkback
  • Most Recent of 15 Talkback(s)
LOL - most ISP's have fought security on clients' PCs
The chickens are coming home to roost! How ironic that most ISP broadband providers were dead set against customers having any sort of security in place. If you had a connection problem, and they fo... (Read the rest)
Posted by: ejhonda Posted on: 03/08/04 You are currently: a Guest | | Terms of Use
Currently the worms and viruses are  michael-t | 03/03/04
And this has what to do with ISPs?  No_Ax_to_Grind | 03/03/04
The challenge is the solution  oren | 03/03/04
Thanks for that flawed OS, Sir Billy of Monopoly  Xunil_Sierutuf | 03/03/04
This isn't news. We already know that (NT)  CobraA1 | 03/03/04
All they have to do is invest a little in installation  Taz_z | 03/03/04
Also  Taz_z | 03/03/04
Combination of factors...  BitFiddler | 03/04/04
Why are these worm infected computers still online?  Tammee | 03/04/04
All these ISP's  PA-ITGuy | 03/04/04
That is what we do  middle of nowhere | 03/05/04
That is wonderful to hear...  Tammee | 03/05/04
Excellent idea!  GraysonPeddie | 03/06/04
Since when is a virus a worm?  Nullifidian | 03/04/04
LOL - most ISP's have fought security on clients' PCs  ejhonda | 03/08/04

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