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By Robert Lemos
Posted on ZDNet News: Jul 16, 2004 4:20:00 AM

Unknown online vandals with an apparent connection to spam e-mail have created a new version of the Bagle computer worm that has spread somewhat successfully in the past 24 hours, antivirus companies said Thursday.

The mass-mailing computer virus, dubbed Bagle.AF or Beagle.AB by different security firms, opens a path for intruders to relay bulk e-mail messages through the infected computer and attempts to contact one of almost 150 compromised German Web sites to let the attackers know of their latest conquest.

"It certainly is successful," said Oliver Friedrichs, senior manager for antivirus firm Symantec's security response center. "It is definitely comparable to threats that we saw earlier this year such as MyDoom."

Symantec raised the virus to a threat rating of three on its five-point scale, while rival antivirus firm McAfee--formerly Network Associates--gave the program a medium danger rating.

The latest incarnation of the Bagle virus is largely a copy of previous versions of the program, Friedrichs said. first worm in the Bagle line started infecting computers in January.

Bagle.AF arrives in e-mail as an attached file and infects computers running the Windows operating system if the user opens the file. The program attempts to halt more than 250 security applications from running on the computer, mails itself to any e-mail address it can find on the computer, and contacts one of 141 German Web sites, twice the number that a previous version of the virus contacted. The diverse Web sites have likely been compromised by online vandals, leaving behind software to record which computers have been infected by the Bagle worm.

With that information, the vandals can use the compromised computers to spread spam, or sell the information to spammers, Friedrichs said. The virus leaves open a backdoor specifically for that purpose.

Increasingly, computer viruses are used to spread software that surreptitiously converts computers to an attacker's purpose. Such "bot" software can be used by spammers and more dangerous online denizens to disrupt access to Web sites or collect personal financial information.

And while the latest Bagle worm uses an old method of spreading itself, it's still effective. Symantec has had almost 175 reports of infections, Friedrichs said.

"I think what we are seeing is that these threats will continue to be successful because people are continuing to trust attachments and continuing to click on them," he said. "Really, the human factor is the weakest link that is allowing these worms to be so successful."

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  • Most Recent of 48 Talkback(s)
i'm saying that
if the lock wasn't put in place, the car left wide open, the keys in the ignition, and THE OWNER OF THE CAR INVITED RANDOM PEOPLE TO COME SIT IN THE DRIVERS SEAT, then it's the user's fault.... (Read the rest)
Posted by: Valis Keogh Posted on: 07/19/04 You are currently: a Guest | | Terms of Use
In related news...  B.O.F.H. | 07/15/04
Adobe chimes in...  Yen_z | 07/16/04
Re: Latest Bagle succeeds by sheer numbers  middle of nowhere | 07/15/04
Anything created by Human Beings  Confused by religion | 07/16/04
should be worked on harder to be fixed (nt)  ryusen | 07/16/04
what in the HECK are you linux phreaks talking about?  Valis Keogh | 07/16/04
Good Luck  bit_rot | 07/16/04
Counter-intuitive?  Anton Philidor | 07/16/04
Re: counter-intuitive  bit_rot | 07/16/04
nope  Valis Keogh | 07/16/04
because...  bit_rot | 07/16/04
strange how i've been doing it for 10+ years  Valis Keogh | 07/16/04
not strange  bit_rot | 07/16/04
ditto on board limitations  Valis Keogh | 07/16/04
but....  ryusen | 07/16/04
no  Valis Keogh | 07/16/04
good for you...  ryusen | 07/16/04
exactly  Valis Keogh | 07/16/04
better is the problem  Valis Keogh | 07/16/04
Agreed. Windows security needs to be USED.  PB_z | 07/16/04
exactly, will you give me your password for a candybar?  Valis Keogh | 07/16/04
Linux Applications with massive security wholes  PmAc_z | 07/16/04
wot utter cr*p  whisperycat | 07/16/04
Wrong, wrong and faulty  mikeybrass | 07/16/04
Could try this  Adidasted | 07/16/04
Prices  mikeybrass | 07/16/04
Incompatibility  SC-man | 07/16/04
I've seen those problems too  voska | 07/16/04
SuSE 9.1 Pro...  Linux User 147560 | 07/16/04
RE: I've seen those problems too  SC-man | 07/16/04
EXACTLY!  PmAc_z | 07/16/04
Not Exactly  SC-man | 07/16/04
i agree up until....  ryusen | 07/16/04
do you know ANYTHING about Windows' "fundamental architecture"?  PB_z | 07/16/04
Thank you!  PmAc_z | 07/16/04
check this out pmac  Valis Keogh | 07/16/04
Evidently you don't know as much as you think  whisperycat | 07/19/04
wrong again  Valis Keogh | 07/16/04
i remember a joke:  ryusen | 07/16/04
Airplanes using Windows NT  PB_z | 07/16/04
one thing you miss...  ryusen | 07/16/04
Unfortunate, but true  CobraA1 | 07/16/04
TESTIFY  Valis Keogh | 07/16/04
and  CobraA1 | 07/16/04
Security Hole  PmAc_z | 07/19/04
i'm saying that  Valis Keogh | 07/19/04
Re: ditto on board limitations (little bear icon)  eulagree | 07/17/04
yup  Valis Keogh | 07/18/04

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