A clarification was made to this story. Read below for details.
Google has warned Web users of the increasing threat posed by malware that can be dropped onto a computer as a Web surfer visits a particular site.
The search giant carried out in-depth research on 4.5 million Web sites and found one in 10 Web pages could successfully launch a "drive-by-download" -- such as a Trojan -- onto a user's computer.
The software potentially allows hackers to access sensitive corporate information or install rogue applications.
Graham Cluley, senior technology consultant at Sophos, told Silicon.com Google is right to highlight what he said is a worsening trend and "a considerable problem" for businesses and end users.
Cluley said an average of around 8,000 new URLs containing malware emerged each day during April.
Most worrying, 70 percent of URLs hosting such malware are found on legitimate Web sites that have been targeted by hackers. The outdated notion that malware only resides in the darker corners of the internet is far from the case now.
The means used to place malware on Web sites includes breaches of Web server security, user-posted content, rogue advertising and third-party widgets.
Cluley said: "They [hackers] used to spread malware by e-mail attachment. What they do now is spam out URLs."
He warned businesses: "You cannot protect users by restricting what sites they go to. You need to start protecting your Web access as well as your e-mail gateway."
Google's The Ghost in the Browser report said the rise in Web-based malware has been aided by the increasing role the Internet plays in everyday life, along with the ease in setting up Web sites.
Clarification: This story has been updated to clarify that 8,000 malware URLs emerged each day during April, not each week, as was originally detailed.











