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-------------------------------------------------------------- This story was printed from ZDNet Australia. --------------------------------------------------------------
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Lumbering viruses infect PCs worldwide By Bob Sullivan, ZDNet Asia November 16, 2000 URL: http://www.zdnet.com.au/news/security/soa/Lumbering-viruses-infect-PCs-worldwide/0,130061744,120106982,00.htm
Two new computer viruses are making a nuisance of themselves this week. Navidad, which first made the rounds on Friday has now been described as a high risk by the US Army. The other, Hybris, is regarded as a low risk by most anti-virus firms. But it has sent spam to the virus research newsgroup, garnering attention from anti-virus researchers. Both viruses infect users the most common way -- by tricking them into opening an attachment. Navidad was first discovered on November 3, but infection reports started trickling in late last week. On Friday, McAfee raised Navidad's risk rating to "medium on watch" because of the number of infections. A spokesperson for McAfee said that only a few infections had been reported by corporations since Monday, but added that the US Army had just raised its risk assessment to "high," probably because it has experienced several infections. "This seems to be a virus that slowly but methodically made its way around," said Mary Landesman, product marketing manager for computer security firm InDefense "It will be a virus that maintains a steady presence. But the spread isn't happening fast enough to create a big media response." Slow-spreading virus
"I think of it as a tank as opposed to a rocket," he said. Navidad only impacts computers running Microsoft Windows and Outlook, but it can infect any flavor of Windows. Because the virus alters a PC's registry, it can prevent victims from running any software on their PC. The virus arrives at its victim's computer masquerading as a reply to a message the victim has sent. 'Tis the season
The program itself places an icon on the victim's computer. If the user clicks on it, then clicks on a button, the message "Feliz Navidad," which means "Merry Christmas" in Spanish, appears. Navidad is not the only seasonal virus recently discovered. McAfee today reported finding "W32/Music," which after infection displays a window titled, "Merry Christmas" and plays rendition of "We Wish You A Merry Christmas." The program arrives with the subject line "Testing to send file," and the body of the message says: "Hi, just testing email using Merry Christmas music file, not bad music." The attachment is called Music.com. McAfee rates this bug a low risk because few infections have been found. Hybris spams researchers
Martin says Symantec has received about 100 submissions of the bug in recent weeks, and an increasing number of submissions over the past few days. The virus is interesting because it can be updated using plug-in technology like that which is used by many Web browsers. Plug-ins can be added to software to increase functionality. When Hybris infects a machine, it uses the alt.comp.virus newsgroup as a sort of central repository for plug-in code. Infected machines send the binary code for their plug-ins to the newsgroup, then scour the newsgroup for any new plug-ins. About 250 such messages were visible in the newsgroup on Tuesday during an MSNBC review. Landesman said she was able to find about 2,000 similar messages. "One could argue that the worm's payload is spamming alt.comp.virus," Landesman said. Hybris arrives with random subject lines, content, and attachment names. In one sample received by Kaspersky, the note arrived from "hahaha@sexyfun.net" with a subject line "Snowhite and the seven Dwarfs - The REAL Story!" The attachment was named "dwarf4you.exe." Despite this stealth, other anti-virus firms still rate the bug a low risk because of a small infection rate. "We've only gotten about a dozen calls on it so far," said a spokesperson for anti-virus firm F-Secure "It's a lower-than-medium-level worry. We're trying not to blow the whistle loud on this one."
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