25 Feb 2008, Tom Young, Computing
http://www.computing.co.uk/ctg/news/1852396/lack-jobs-driving-it-pros-malware
The growing number of cyber criminals in areas of Asia and Eastern-Europe is the result of a lack of IT jobs for qualified professionals, according to a report from vendor Mcafee.
And the growing trade in malware means that authors can sell their code to other criminals without actually releasing their viruses.
Writing malware is a hard option to ignore, according to Joe Telafici, vice president of operations at Mcafee.
"The motivation to engage in illegal behavior is strong in Eastern Europe where technical skills were widely taught during the Cold War but economic opportunities are limited," he said.
"The same is true in Asia, where population growth has stretched strong economic performance to the limits."
In China, 43 per cent of IT graduates are unemployed, and hacker "training" web sites are creating a pool of effective malware authors and paying them like a legitimate business.
In September last year, Chinese courts sentenced malware author Li Jun, 25, to four years in prison.
Li Jun had graduated from an IT training college and earned three times China's average salary writing malware, despite being offered legitimate positions in the business world.
Reader comments
© Incisive Media Investments Limited 2012, Published by Incisive Financial Publishing Limited, Haymarket House, 28-29 Haymarket, London SW1Y 4RX, are companies registered in England and Wales with company registration numbers 04252091 & 04252093
Typo under your image
Your image has a caption of "Nearly have of IT graduates in China are unemployed" which should probably be "Nearly half of IT graduates in China are unemployed" or even "Nearly halve of IT graduates in China are unemployed" if you are stretching word meaning.
Posted by: Jason 25 Feb 2008