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By Joris Evers
Posted on ZDNet News: May 31, 2005 10:12:00 PM

A bunch of new variants of the Bagle virus and Mytob worm are spreading, but they won't pose a major threat if people take the usual precautions, security companies say.

Three new iterations of Bagle, released at one-hour intervals, popped up on Tuesday, said Maksym Schipka, a senior antivirus researcher at MessageLabs. About 70 variants of the mass-mailing computer virus have been reported since it first appeared in January 2004.

MessageLabs, which filters out malicious software from e-mail for clients, stopped nearly 100,000 copies of the Bagle variants in the first few hours after they hit, Schipka said. "We are seeing huge volumes," he said. MessageLabs said that the new versions appear to have originated from a Yahoo group.

The new Bagles do little to trick users into running their malicious content. The e-mail has no subject line or body text. The attachment is a ZIP archive that will attempt to download a Trojan horse from a list of Web sites, if unpacked and run. The Trojan harvests e-mail addresses from the PC to further spread the virus, Schipka said. It also installs a backdoor.

Mytob, like Bagle, is generating new offspring. It is a malicious worm that installs a backdoor and uses its own e-mail engine to forward itself to addresses that it gathers from infected computers.

Two new variants of Mytob have appeared over the past few days--one on Sunday and one on Tuesday, said Craig Schmugar, a virus research manager at McAfee.

New versions of Bagle and Mytob appear often. These recent ones are more of the same, said Alfred Huger, senior director of engineering at Symantec Security Response. "They are both, thankfully, fairly low-risk threats at this stage, in terms of their spread. We're seeing a low number of infections."

PC users can protect themselves by installing the latest updates for their antivirus software and using caution when opening e-mail attachments, the security providers said.

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critical mass on windows platform
http://www.analogstereo.com/volkswagen_owners_manual.htm... (Read the rest)
Posted by: us_forums@... Posted on: 05/27/07 You are currently: a Guest | | Terms of Use
Critical Mass  thti88 | 05/31/05
critical mass on windows platform  us_forums@... | 05/27/07
Re: More Bagle, Mytob worms wriggle free  Densky_z | 05/31/05
Use Common Sense!  markheyes | 05/31/05
Sense Common ?  beepa | 05/31/05
Ok use UNCOMMON sense then  Squawkbox | 05/31/05
Nothing left to say...except  glstorck@... | 05/31/05
Mytob  Sugarat_z | 05/31/05
School's Out!  progan01@... | 05/31/05
*yawn*  CobraA1 | 05/31/05
Remember use protection  Squawkbox | 05/31/05
lmao  IT Scion | 05/31/05
Message has been deleted.  glstorck@... | 05/31/05
eat the big green mint  us_forums@... | 05/27/07
Why not..  IT Scion | 05/31/05
Point well taken  CalebAndCo | 06/01/05
It's called a "Convenience Charge"...  doctormoriarty | 06/01/05
Please DO protect your PCs!  artplus@... | 05/31/05
Best solution!  Reverend MacFellow | 06/01/05
You got that right, Kinte!  MTMacPhee | 06/01/05
buy a mac?  gcbon | 06/01/05
Mac is not the only solution  immrlizard | 06/01/05
Do what you can with what you have  gcbon | 06/01/05
RE: Best solution!  nightshade0143 | 06/03/05
Got an email with Bagle today  silverg50 | 06/01/05
yes, the solution IS buy a mac  mlindl | 06/01/05
RE: yes, the solution IS buy a mac  nightshade0143 | 06/03/05
Protections from computer infections  james4shari | 06/01/05
Correction  james4shari | 06/01/05
It adds new definitions  us_forums@... | 05/27/07

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