From: Ari Tjahjawandita <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

Microsoft kills Net address to foil worm

By Ina Fried
Staff Writer, CNET News.com
August 15, 2003, 9:24 AM PT

special coverage
'MSBlast' echoes over Net
 Worm exploits widespread
 Windows flaw

As part of its effort to stop the progress of the MSBlast worm, Microsoft
is killing off the Windows Update address that the self-propagating
program was set to attack.
Because the worm is programmed to attack only that address and not the
site that it redirects to, the software giant has decided to eliminate the
Windowsupdate.com address. The move is one of a series of efforts that
Microsoft has undertaken to try to thwart an attack on its servers that
was expected to be launched by infected computers starting Friday.

"One strategy for cushioning the blow was to extinguish the
Windowsupdate.com" site, said Microsoft spokesman Sean Sundwall. "We have
no plans to ever restore that to be an active site."

On Thursday, Microsoft changed the Internet addresses that correspond to
the Windowsupdate.com entry in the domain name service (DNS) servers that
act as the Internet's address book. One source familiar with the change
said that the new addresses are no longer on the same network as
Microsoft's other servers, thereby insulating the company's servers from
any attack aimed at Windowsupdate.com.

Sundwall stressed that the Windows Update service remains up and running,
noting that the service never connected to Windowsupdate.com. Access to
Windows Update is built into the latest versions of Microsoft's Windows
client and server operating systems.

To get the latest patches, consumers can type in
windowsupdate.microsoft.com or, as Microsoft would prefer, go to the main
Microsoft.com page, where they can find information on downloading patches
as well as on setting up a firewall and installing antivirus software.

The worm is programmed to start attacking Windowsupdate.com at midnight
Friday in each time zone. As a result, Australia was among the first
countries slated to be affected, with its midnight hitting at 7 a.m. PDT.

Even as Microsoft battles the MSBlast worm, the company was hit late
Thursday with a separate denial-of-service attack on its main
Microsoft.com site. The site was largely inaccessible for about four
hours, beginning at 9 p.m. PDT Thursday.

The company does not know the origin of the outage but said it stemmed
from a denial-of-service attack unrelated to the MSBlast worm. Sundwall
said Microsoft has "every confidence that it had nothing to do with
'Blaster,'" as the worm is also known.

CNET News.com's Robert Lemos contributed to this report.


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