Spamhaus declares Grum botnet dead, but Festi surges

17.08.2012
A relatively new botnet has taken up the slack left by the shutdown in July of another major spamming botnet called Grum, according to the junk mail fighting organization Spamhaus.

The botnet, named Festi or Spamnost, has surged since the demise of Grum. Spamhaus counts at least 250,000 unique IP addresses showing signs of a Festi infection, up from around 20,000 unique IP addresses preceding Grum's takedown by security researchers.

"Since the beginning of July, the Spamhaus XBL [Exploit Block List] has seen a huge increase in Festi spamming activities," wrote Spamhaus' Thomas Morrison on the organizaton's on Thursday. "At the peak, during one 24-hour period the XBL detected nearly 300,000 IP addresses that were infected with Festi, out of a total of one million that were infected with some sort of spam-sending bot.

"The sheer volume of Festi spam overwhelmed spam detection processes at some security organizations," he wrote.

Spamhaus provides its to email service providers, which use it to block IP addresses that have been found to deliver malware or spam.

Festi, which in December 2011, is now competing with Cutwail to be the most prolific spamming botnet. Festi's rise follows a familiar pattern: As security researchers, vendors and law enforcement have notched more successes in technically interfering with botnets and taking their infrastructure offline, spammers quickly move to other botnets.