I had at least 5 attempts to infect my PC tonight.
Anyone else getting hits?



http://www.washingtonpost.com/ac2/wp-dyn/A16499-2003Aug19?language=printer

New Fast-Spreading Sobig Worm Adds to 'Worm Week'

A new mass e-mail worm that attempts to download files from the Internet and
potentially leave computers vulnerable to further attack was spreading
quickly around the world on Tuesday, anti-virus experts said.
The new worm, dubbed Sobig.F, is at least the fourth new, major Internet
worm to hit computers worldwide in the past week, prompting anti-virus
vendor F-Secure to declare this the "worst virus week ever."

Sobig.F, a variant of an older worm, began spreading on Monday in Europe and
has infected an estimated tens of thousands of Windows-based computers, said
Patrick Hinojosa, chief technology officer at Panda Software, based in
Madrid.

It arrives in e-mail and includes a variety of subject lines, including
"Your details," "Thank you!," "Your application" and "Wicked screensaver."
It has caused some corporate e-mail systems to grind to a halt, according to
Sophos Inc.

When the .pif or .scr attachment is opened, Sobig.F infects the computer and
sends itself on to other victims using a random e-mail address from the
address book.

It also prepares the computer to receive orders and tries to download files
from the Internet, said Hinojosa. It was unknown exactly what files they
were, he said.

If the infected computer is on a shared network, the worm tries to copy
itself to the other computers on that network.

The worm is programmed to stop spreading on Sept. 10.

Network Associates Inc. has rated Sobig.F a medium risk because of the quick
rate of spread, said Jimmy Kuo, research fellow at Network Associates, an
anti-virus software vendor.

Sobig.F was spreading at an "alarming rate," accounting for nearly 80
percent of all infection reports recorded on Tuesday, according to
anti-virus provider Central Command.

Sobig.F comes on the heels of the Blaster, or LoveSan, worm which hit
hundreds of thousands of computers worldwide last week, spreading to victims
through a security hole in the Windows operating system and crashing them.

On Monday, another worm surfaced that was written to remove Blaster from
infected computers and patch the hole. That worm, dubbed "Welchia" or
"Nachi," was temporarily paralyzing many corporate networks, experts
reported.

In addition, an e-mail hoax was circulating, purporting to be a patch from
Microsoft for the security hole Blaster exploits. But the e-mail instead
contains a Trojan application that installs itself on the computer as a back
door enabling an attacker remote access to the system.

There has not been so much virus activity since the Code Red and Nimda worms
hit about a year ago, experts said.



xponent

All Your Worms Are Ours Maru

rob


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