If in your natural state of eternal optimism you think the Bad Guys have started to slack off, think again.
Microsoft uses an index called CCM (Computers Cleaned per Mille) which is the number of computers cleaned for every 1000 executions of their Malicious Software Removal Tool. It's a handy way to see what the infection rate is by OS, or region, or whatever. In 2Q2013 the CCM for the USA was 11.5% (down from 14% in 1Q), but in some developing countries it's north of 40%.
An interesting article on ZDNet discusses some even-more-depressing possibilities about Windows XP end-of-life and potential attacks, vulnerabilities, and exploits. Consider the following:
So what's the news here? This new frightening scenario: after the last patch of XP (probably on April 8, 2014) attackers will study every new patch to Vista and Windows 7 to see if XP is also vulnerable in the same way. And when it is, they will build an exploit and launch it out the window to do its evilness. But unlike Vista and the other still-supported versions of Windows, XP won't get a patch to fix it. So people still running XP--even inside VMs in many cases--will be vulnerable to attack.
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