This was posted an hour ago - 
 

McAfee antivirus program goes berserk, freezes PCs

By PETER SVENSSON, AP Technology Writer Peter Svensson, Ap Technology
Writer - 26 mins ago

NEW YORK - Computers in companies, hospitals and schools around the
world got stuck repeatedly rebooting themselves Wednesday after an
antivirus program identified a normal Windows file as a virus.

McAfee Inc. confirmed that a software update it posted at 9 a.m. Eastern
time caused its antivirus program for corporate customers to misidentify
a harmless file. It has posted a replacement update for download.

"We are not aware of significant impact on consumers and believe we have
effectively limited such occurrence," the company said in a statement.

Online posters begged to differ, saying thousands of computers running
Windows XP with Service Pack 3 were rendered useless.

About a third of the hospitals in Rhode Island were forced to stop
treating patients without traumas in emergency rooms. The hospitals also
postponed some elective surgeries, said Nancy Jean, a spokeswoman for
the Lifespan system of hospitals. The system includes Rhode Island
Hospital, the state's largest, and Newport Hospital, the only hospital
on Aquidneck Island.

Jean said patients who required emergency care for gunshot wounds, car
accidents, blunt trauma and other potentially fatal injuries were still
being admitted to the emergency rooms.

In Kentucky, state police were told to shut down the computers in their
patrol cars as technicians tried to fix the problem. The National
Science Foundation headquarters in Arlington, Va., also lost computer
access.

Peter Juvinall, systems administrator at Illinois State University in
Normal, said that when the first computer started rebooting it quickly
became evident that it was a major problem, affecting dozens of
computers at the College of Business alone.

"I originally thought it was a virus," he said. When the tech support
people concluded McAfee's update was to blame, they stopped further
downloads of the faulty software update and started shuttling from
computer to computer to get them working again.

Such personal attention to each PC from a technician appeared to be the
only way to fix the problem because the computers weren't receptive to
remote software updates when stuck in the reboot cycle. That slowed the
recovery.

Intel Corp. appeared to be among the victims, according to employee
posts on Twitter. Intel did not immediately return calls for comment.

 

Michael Walker

Senior Network Engineer

Citrus Valley Health Partners

140 W. College Street, Covina, CA  91723

Phone/Fax/Pager: (888) 299-6882

mwal...@mail.cvhp.org <mailto:mwal...@mail.cvhp.org> 

 

         


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