New User? Click here to register! Feel free to read this for beginners help.

Computer Cops
image image image image image image image image
Prime Choice
· Dnld of the Week!
· Yahoo & CCSP!
· Find a Cure!

· Ian T's (Article 10)
· Marcia's (Op5)
· Paul's (Article 3)

· Ian T's Archive
· Marcia's Archive
· Paul's Archive
· Dnload Archive!
image
CCSP Toolkit
· Email Virus Scan
· UDP Port Scanner
· TCP Port Scanner
· Trojan TCP Scan
· Reveal Your IP
· Algorithms
· Whois
· nmap port scanner
· IPs Banned [?]
image
Security Central
· Home
· Wireless
· Bookmarks
· Columbia
· Community
· Downloads
· Encyclopedia
· Feedback (send)
· Forums
· Gallery
· HijackThis
· Journal
· Members List
· My Downloads
· PremChat
· Premium
· Private Messages
· Proxomitron
· Quizz
· Recommend Us
· RegChat
· Reviews
· Search
· Sections
· Statistics
· Stories Archive
· Submit News
· Surveys
· Top
· Topics
· Web Links
· Your Account
image
Donations
image
Search

image
Survey
Which Anti-Virus product do you use?

Computer Associates
Eset (NOD32)
F-Secure
Frisk (F-Prot)
Grisoft (AVG)
Kaspersky
Network Associates (McAfee)
Panda
Sophos
Symantec (NAV)
Trend Micro
Other



Results
Polls

Votes: 6128
Comments: 53
image
image worm: Beware!: Sober.D Worm Spreads to North America image
Worms


Sober.D Worm Spreads to North America
By Dennis Fisher
March 8, 2004

A new worm purporting to contain a patch to defend against MyDoom is attacking Windows machines throughout Europe and parts of North America.

Sober.D appeared Sunday and began spreading in Germany and the United Kingdom. The worm arrives in an e-mail message with a subject line of Microsoft Alert: Please Read! and carries a sending address with a Microsoft domain. The domain extension on the messages is typically from Germany, Israel, Switzerland or Austria.

The new worm comes a week after the largest, most concentrated onslaught of virus activity in recent memory, which included the appearances of 16 new viruses within about 10 days. Most of those new threats were variants of existing viruses, including MyDoom. The original version of Sober hit the Internet last October and never amounted to much.

Many of the samples of the new variant that anti-virus vendors have seen so far have been written in German. The body of the infected message reads:

New MyDoom Virus Variant Detected! A new variant of the W32.Mydoom (W32.Novarg) worm spread rapidly through the Internet. Anti-virus vendor Central Command claims that 1 in 45 e-mails contains the MyDoom virus. The worm also has a backdoor Trojan capability. By default, the Trojan component listens on port 13468. Protection: Please download this digitally signed attachment. This Update includes the functionality of previously released patches.

The message includes a file attachment that is either an executable or a Zip archive, according to Network Associates Inc.'s analysis of Sober.D. Once installed on a machine, the virus will display a phony error message indicating either that the fake patch has been installed or does not need to be installed on the PC.

Sober.D then scours the machine's hard drive for e-mail addresses and begins mailing itself out.

Officials at NAI, based in Santa Clara, Calif., said they had seen about 100 samples of Sober.D as of early Monday morning.


Full coverage @ eWeek
Posted on Monday, 08 March 2004 @ 11:10:11 EST by phoenix22
image

 
Login
Nickname

Password

· New User? ·
Click here to create a registered account.
image
Related Links
· TrackBack (0)
· Microsoft
· Microsoft
· HotScripts
· W3 Consortium
· More about Worms
· News by phoenix22


Most read story about Worms:
W32.Welchia.Worm-L4*

image
Article Rating
Average Score: 0
Votes: 0

Please take a second and vote for this article:

Bad
Regular
Good
Very Good
Excellent


image
Options

Printer Friendly Page  Printer Friendly Page

Send to a Friend  Send to a Friend
image
"Login" | Login/Create an Account | 0 comments
Threshold
  
The comments are owned by the poster. We aren't responsible for their content.