For what it's worth. Fritz
________________________________ From: Mike Wood [mailto:mw...@encorebank.com] Sent: Friday, September 10, 2010 12:10 PM To: Encore Bank; Encore Trust; Linscomb-Williams; Town and Country Insurance Subject: Virus Outbreak FYI please be aware of the following virus outbreak. It is spread via email which includes Gmail, Hotmail, Yahoo, etc... Please do not open PDF files from unknown sources. A new virus based in e-mails with the subject line "Here You have" began running rampant Thursday, hitting corporate America hard. So far, the virus has already been sighted at ABC/Disney, Google, Coca Cola and NASA, several individuals with knowledge of the situation told TheWrap. Comcast was forced to shut down its e-mail servers entirely after being hit, a spokesperson said on Twitter. "Apparently, this virus (if you click on it) will pooch your PC if you shut it off if you're infected," she added. .."Good Morning America" weatherman Sam Champion was among those affected at ABC. He posted a message on Twitter that said a "huge email-spam-virus" was "filling up" his ABC News e-mail account. According to a person at Disney, the virus struck there at approximately 11 a.m. PT. The prevalence of the virus was dramatically demonstrated on Google through a dramatic spike in Internet searches about the outbreak. Throughout the afternoon, "Here You Have" ranked as the No. 2 search on Google behind "Terry Jones pastor." E-mails that carry the virus contain a link that encourages readers to click on a PDF document file. But rather than a PDF, the file contains a Windows script that transmits a virus and spams the entire contact list of the person who opened the file. The Internet Storm Center, at the SANS Technology Institute, an organization dedicated to tracking malicious Internet activity, reported receiving "tons of e-mails" about malware spreading through e-mails with the phrase "Here You Have" in the subject line. Another anti-virus organization, the McAfee Threat Center, is investigating the outbreak. A note posted on the McAfee site Thursday afternoon said: "It looks like multiple variants may be spreading and may take some time to work through them all to paint a clearer picture."