Browser makers may have added new antiphishing features to their products in recent months, but the criminals are still gaining ground in their efforts to defraud U.S. consumers, according to the Gartner research firm.Phishers have hit more victims with their online attacks, and while fewer people are losing money to phishers, successful attempts have been yielding bigger payoffs, said Avivah Litan, vice president and distinguished analyst at Gartner. “When they do succeed, they’re stealing five times more than they stole last year.”The average loss per phishing attack was US$1,244 this year, Litan said, up from $256. Gartner estimates that the total financial losses attributable to phishing will total $2.8 billion this year.And users who are taken in by phishing scams are less likely to recover their money, Litan said. In 2005, 80 percent of victims got their money back. This year, that number dropped to 54 percent. Gartner estimates that 3.5 million Americans will give up sensitive information to phishers in 2006—up from an estimated 1.9 million last year.Although the recently released Internet Explorer 7 and Firefox 2.0 browsers came with new antiphishing features, Microsoft and Mozilla are still playing catch-up with the crooks. “It’s still too early to know how effective [these new antiphishing features] are, but certainly that technology is a couple of years too late,” Litan said.Phishing filters are not working because attackers are moving around their phishing websites and making it very difficult for antiphishing tools to tell the difference between a computer that is malicious and one that is simply unknown, she said. A year ago, the average life span of a phisher’s website was one week. Now it’s just a few hours. “In the next year or two it will probably be one server per e-mail,” Litan said. “They’re impossible to catch and take down.”Antiphishing expert Paul Laudanski agrees that these attacks are on the rise. Part of the problem, he says, is the fact that ISPs and the companies being spoofed by phishers are not doing all they could to share information and track down the criminals.Often companies are reluctant to share information for fear that it may lead to lawsuits, said Laudanski, owner of Computer Cops and the leader of the Phishing Incident Reporting and Termination squad project.“What we need, I believe, is free, open communication,” he said. “The criminals are working together in this, but it’s hard for us to work together.” -Robert McMillan, IDG News Service (San Francisco Bureau)Related Links: First Phishing, Now Vishing Fighting Phish, Fakes and Frauds Killing PhishCheck out our CIO News Alerts and Tech Informer pages for more updated news coverage. Related content feature Expedia poised to take flight with generative AI CTO Rathi Murthy sees the online travel service’s vast troves of data and AI expertise fueling a two-pronged transformation strategy aimed at growing the company by bringing more of the travel industry online. By Paula Rooney Jun 02, 2023 7 mins Travel and Hospitality Industry Digital Transformation Artificial Intelligence case study Deoleo doubles down on sustainability through digital transformation The Spanish multinational olive oil processing company is immersed in a digital transformation journey to achieve operational efficiency and contribute to the company's sustainability strategy. By Nuria Cordon Jun 02, 2023 6 mins CIO Supply Chain Digital Transformation brandpost Resilient data backup and recovery is critical to enterprise success As global data volumes rise, business must prioritize their resiliency strategies. By Neal Weinberg Jun 01, 2023 4 mins Security brandpost Democratizing HPC with multicloud to accelerate engineering innovations Cloud for HPC is facilitating broader access to high performance computing and accelerating innovations and opportunities for all types of organizations. By Tanya O'Hara Jun 01, 2023 6 mins Multi Cloud Podcasts Videos Resources Events SUBSCRIBE TO OUR NEWSLETTER From our editors straight to your inbox Get started by entering your email address below. Please enter a valid email address Subscribe