"Operate your computer without anti-virus protection at your own risk and
at the risk of endangering others"
October 6, 2002
E - Mail Worm Continues to Spread
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Filed at 3:38 p.m. ET
NEW YORK (AP) -- An e-mail-borne computer virus that lets hackers control
infected machines remotely continues to spread and constitutes the most
severe attack this year, experts say.
The worm, known as W32.Bugbear, or I-Worm.Tanatos, infects computers that
use Microsoft's Windows operating systems. It was first spotted a week ago
and has spread to dozens of countries.
Once a machine is infected, a hacker could steal and delete information
from it.
Some subject lines for the e-mail are ``bad news,'' ``Membership
Confirmation,'' ``Market Update Report,'' and ``Your Gift.''
The worm replicates itself through a Windows machine's e-mail address book
and can attach itself to previously sent e-mail messages.
The worm can also spread through network systems and has keystroke-logging
and backdoor capabilities that allow hackers to intercept passwords and
gain access to computers over the Internet.
It also attempts to terminate various antivirus and firewall programs,
according to Symantec Corp., which has posted a downloadable repair on its
Web site. Symantec has rated Bugbear a severe threat.
Bugbear is currently the worst computer security outbreak globally, Mikko
Hypponen, manager of anti-virus research at F-Secure Corp. in Helsinki,
Finland, said in an e-mail to The Associated Press.
F-Secure also has posted a fix on its Web site.
The worm is expected to last well into next year because many consumers
will not realize their computer is infected, Hypponen said.
Microsoft issued a patch last year, Security Bulletin MS01-027. But many
users to do not keep their machines current with patches.
------
On the Net:
http://www.f-secure.com
http://www.symantec.com
|