A list of options at top of the home page allows visitors to transact business in Russian or in English, offers an FAQ section, spells out the terms and conditions for software use and provides details on payment forms that are supported. The site offers malicious code that webmasters with criminal intent can use to infect visitors to their sites with a spyware Trojan horse. In return for downloading the malware to their sites, Web site owners are promised at least ¬50 — about $66 (U.S.) — every Monday, with the potential for even more for “clean installs” of the malicious code on end user systems. As organized gangs increasingly turn to cybercrime, sites like the one described are coming to represent the new face of malware development and distribution, according to security researchers. Unlike malicious code writers of the past who tended to distribute their code to a tight group of insiders or in underground newsgroups, the new breed is far more professional about how it hawks, plies and prices its wares, they said. “We’ve been seeing a growth of highly organized managed exploit providers in non-extradition countries” over the past year or so, said Gunter Ollmann, director of security strategies at IBM’s Internet Security Systems X-Force team. For subscriptions starting as low as $20 per month, such enterprises sell “fully managed exploit engines” that spyware distributors and spammers can use to infiltrate systems worldwide, he said.