Kaspersky Lab launches Cyberstat portal

Kaspersky Lab has launched new a Cyberstat portal, which shows how vast the present day cyberworld is and how quickly it expands.

At first it startles: lots of colored tiles not unlike the start screen of Windows 8 – with perpetually running figures on them. These figures are really big and their speed feels a bit mesmerizing. Kaspersky Lab’s new portal Kaspersky Cyberstat is a live statistics tool. It’s rather similar in its purpose to the previous (and fancier) Kaspersky Cybermap: It shows what is going on globally – in the cyberworld as it is now.

The portal pays specific attention to the threats – most active and most harmful malware, most attacked resources, etc. The portal also presents ratings of the most widespread online threats, lists of countries most frequently attacked over the previous month and the number of different malware samples detected today.

This data is complemented with statistical information on the total number of Internet users worldwide, including those users who have only recently discovered the Internet. 

Visitors to the new resource will be able to see how many emails were sent in the last year worldwide, the number of blog posts or tweets written in the last 24 hours, and also how many new mobile phones were sold today, how many sites were hacked, etc.

There is even data on the world population (Did you know over 7.2 billion people inhabit this blue ball wandering in the starry void?), including births and deaths today and since the beginning of the year. This data is acquired from Worldometers.info.

While this wouldn’t show you any certain correllation between deaths in 2014 and the number of, say, malicious mobile apps worldwide. But what it does show is the blazing velocity at which the cyberworld is expanding. This, as notes Sergey Novikov, Deputy Director of Kaspersky Lab’s Global Research & Analysis Team, not only provides new opportunities but also brings new risks.

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Let’s take a look on the more stable figures.

There are:

  • Over 7.2 billion people living on Earth;
  • Over 2.9 billion internet users in the world today;
  • Over 33 million people become new Internet users this year.

These people:

  •  Sent 125.7 billion emails today (and way over 43,278 billion Emails this year in total);
  • Wrote 2.2 million blog posts today;
  •  Made 335,9 billion Google search requests this year;
  • Sent 386 million tweets today;
  • Bought over 3 million mobile phones today;
  • Bought 610 thousands computers so far this year;
  • Own more than 1.29 billion Android phones (worldwide);
  • Have over 6.9 billion SIM-cards activated (worldwide).

And about threats:

  • There are over 12 million malicious mobile apps registered worldwide now;
  • Over 3 million mobile users affected by SMS Trojans over the last 12 months;
  • Over 8 thousands detected banker Trojans;
  • Over 12.8 thousands ransom Trojans;
  • Over 40.4 thousands spying Trojans.

And, as I’m finishing this post, the total number of cyber attacks today passed 8.8 million mark at high speed. It looks like there will be more than 10 million by the end of the day.

This is our reality.

P.S.: Statistical data is acquired partly from Kaspersky Security Network, our cloud-based service, which provides real-time information about new threats, detected by Kaspersky Lab products. The data unrelated to cyberthreats is derived from other sources, in particular the online statistical services worldometers.info and realityclock.com.

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