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By News.com
Posted on ZDNet News: Feb 2, 2004 4:35:00 PM

MyDoom could spell the end of some security technologies.

The virus, which has combined many old attack techniques into a successful package, was hardly blunted by antivirus programs during the first few hours of its exponential spread.

That's a problem, said Shlomo Touboul, CEO of security software maker Finjan Software.

"The MyDoom attack should never have propagated so far into the Internet," he said. "It is obvious that we need another layer (of software) to protect during the first hours of attack."

Despite a deep understanding of how such viruses spread, security experts seem to be at a loss at how to stop them. Popular antivirus technology is generally ineffectual against many of the attacks until an update is downloaded by the user. Moreover, even though antivirus software is the most popular security technology in use--about 99 percent of corporations use it, according to the Computer Security Institute--many home users still don't use the software.


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"Many people don't even have the software," said Bruce Schneier, chief technology officer for Counterpane Internet Security. "And for those that do, the first few hours of an epidemic is a race against time."

MyDoom spread through e-mail a week ago, infecting a new computer every time an unwary user opened the attached filed containing the program. As many as 2 million computers may have been infected. The original virus was programmed to attack The SCO Group's Web site last Sunday, while a variant is scheduled to target Microsoft on Tuesday.

E-mail service provider MessageLabs has quarantined more than 17 million e-mail messages in a week, said Alex Shipp, senior antivirus technologist for the company. From data captured early in the epidemic, MessageLabs says that for every Internet address with an infected PC behind it, eight e-mails are sent, on average, to one of the company's customers.

However, even though companies are still seeing massive quantities of e-mail messages bearing the MyDoom virus, the spread has slowed, stressed Shipp.

"I don't think that there are going to be many more people who are left to get infected," he said. "It has gotten most of the available pool of (unwary) people to open it."

The rapid spread opens new questions about how users and companies should defend themselves against the next virus. New software may not be the solution, Counterpane's Schneier said. Instead, the balance between usability and security may have to be re-evaluated.

"It's a fundamental question," he said. "Is the ability to execute attachments from Outlook a feature or a bug? I think it is a bug."

Unless such threats are dealt with, many more computers connected to the Internet may be compromised. While MyDoom infects PCs and turns them into platforms from which to attack other PCs and to send spam, other attacks could be possible and even more devastating, said Paul Mockapetris, chairman and chief scientist for Internet technology firm Nominum.

"People should anticipate that (the attacker) is going to point these hacked PCs at other sites--that's coming," he said. "What's going to be the security of all Web sites if those attacks get more prevalent?"

Already, SCO is feeling the pain. The company's Web site is the primary denial-of-service target of PCs infected with the original version of the MyDoom virus. At 8:09 PST on Sunday morning, infected PCs were programmed to deluge the site with data.

The attack, which effectively shuts down a site by flooding it with a deluge of information, is hard to stop, said Blake Stowell, a spokesman for SCO.

"You have to try and think creatively about how to solve the problem," he said. "Is it something that you have to throw money at it or to think creatively and come up with a technical solution?"

After trying to keep its site up, SCO took its address out of the domain name system, the global yellow pages for the Internet. It's now referring people to a new Web site.

The same thing could happen to Microsoft's main Web site, starting Tuesday. A second variant of the MyDoom virus, which has hasn't spread as far as the original, will begin sending data to the software giant's site. Microsoft would not comment Monday on its defenses, except to say that the company had prepared for the attack.

Other security experts believed Microsoft would fare better than SCO.

"It just goes to show what possibilities exist out there," said Vincent Gullotto, vice president of antivirus research for security company Network Associates. "When this was supposed to happen to Microsoft last year, I think they dealt with it in a more effective manner."

biography Robert Lemos is a senior staff writer at CNET News.com.

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  • Talkback
  • Most Recent of 136 Talkback(s)
Oh well, sh** happens ...
Is there any perfect, universal remedy against sh** happening?!
Every time something goes wrong we learn on. So in a way, I'm sure this was good for security's future.... (Read the rest)
Posted by: Shodan_z Posted on: 02/13/04 You are currently: a Guest | | Terms of Use
No, it shows Microsoft software is not working!!!  Bobby Sskcat | 02/03/04
You need a life....  DarbyOhara | 02/03/04
Flaming does not prove your point  Michael Kelly | 02/03/04
I'll give it a shot.  Immanuel Tranz-Mischen | 02/03/04
Excellent suggestion  pschroeder@... | 02/03/04
So why hasn't MS done this?  Immanuel Tranz-Mischen | 02/04/04
Good question  pschroeder@... | 02/04/04
Why wait 4 to 6 years?  Immanuel Tranz-Mischen | 02/04/04
waiting  pschroeder@... | 02/05/04
partly agree  ryusen | 02/03/04
Ask And Ye Shall Receive ...  coffeenite | 02/03/04
Please do go on  Michael Kelly | 02/03/04
Points  pschroeder@... | 02/03/04
More Points  coffeenite | 02/03/04
Deep browsers and ZIP programs  pschroeder@... | 02/03/04
Browsers, operating systems, and untrusted techies  Anton Philidor | 02/03/04
No, it proves that there is always a bigger idiot  nucrash | 02/03/04
Users aren't always that dumb ...  coffeenite | 02/03/04
...but, quite often, they are!  pschroeder@... | 02/03/04
Eh ....  coffeenite | 02/03/04
What to do?  Doug@... | 02/03/04
Do this  MarcB_z | 02/03/04
Sigh  pschroeder@... | 02/03/04
Get rid of ActiveX and VBA and 97% of the problem is solved  MarcB_z | 02/04/04
Neither of which would have solved THIS problem (NT)  pschroeder@... | 02/04/04
But that other 3% thingy would have (NT)  MarcB_z | 02/05/04
maybe ... except for the dumb user issue (NT)  pschroeder@... | 02/05/04
Fine for the corporate environment  jfrankcarr | 02/03/04
question  Hanover Phist | 02/03/04
...which...  pschroeder@... | 02/03/04
you are right  ryusen | 02/03/04
Save and execute no fix  wolf_z | 02/03/04
AMEN, Built-in SECURITY helps tho'  MarcB_z | 02/03/04
Ok, so then they should have rights to restrict what you can do on your pc?  TreborG2 | 02/03/04
I think they should be restricted  voska | 02/03/04
restrictions  ryusen | 02/03/04
Nobody said "restrict"  MarcB_z | 02/04/04
Restrict execs  Domb2 | 02/03/04
don't forget...  pschroeder@... | 02/03/04
Harder to hurt yourself/easier to effect others  Domb2 | 02/03/04
integration  pschroeder@... | 02/03/04
RE Integration  Domb2 | 02/03/04
RE RE integration  pschroeder@... | 02/03/04
re re re:  ryusen | 02/03/04
Integrated NOT EQUAL TO welded  MarcB_z | 02/04/04
Exactly.  bhanes@... | 02/03/04
Maybe we could return to non-executable mail?  Atlant | 02/03/04
Easy, get rid of VB & Office Macros  MarcB_z | 02/03/04
Lot's of systems use this technology  Heatlesssun | 02/03/04
Excel and Word are good reporting tools  jfrankcarr | 02/03/04
getting rid of useful features,  ryusen | 02/03/04
Microsft "solution" negates "useful" features  MarcB_z | 02/04/04
you don't get it... JPG & GIF can have embedded URLs!  TreborG2 | 02/03/04
Stupid Human Tricks  Squawkbox | 02/03/04
Actually ... Image files don't work that way  coffeenite | 02/03/04
Email should be just plain text  voska | 02/03/04
Files  pschroeder@... | 02/03/04
Even at that  bhanes@... | 02/03/04
Of all things...  rbethell | 02/03/04
spam filtering doesn't stop mail from *known* sources  TreborG2 | 02/03/04
{cough} change the OS {cough}  Xunil_Sierutuf | 02/03/04
still the wrong answer  TreborG2 | 02/03/04
good comments  Domb2 | 02/03/04
How about  bhanes@... | 02/03/04
The answer is so simple...  Heatlesssun | 02/03/04
Simpler solution  tic swayback | 02/03/04
to scan the attachment  Fred Flintsone | 02/03/04
Yes, I read it !  chawly | 02/09/04
funny thing about linux...  ryusen | 02/03/04
Suggested Solutions  Domb2 | 02/03/04
Other options  Letophoro | 02/03/04
And item 5  Domb2 | 02/03/04
Pop-up msg's worthless  Gasman_z | 02/03/04
Overrides are too common  Domb2 | 02/03/04
Let's agree and disagree  chawly | 02/09/04
The real story  usapride | 02/03/04
About enough  MkIIISupra | 02/03/04
license requirement  Domb2 | 02/03/04
Amen ... but apply that across the boards  pschroeder@... | 02/03/04
Nice post.....  Jose Jimenez | 02/03/04
problem with licencing  ryusen | 02/03/04
The NSA are fools?  B.O.F.H. | 02/03/04
well  bhanes@... | 02/03/04
Yes but .....  chawly | 02/09/04
Granted I only deal with SMB's  JoeMama_z | 02/03/04
It won't work  j.m.galvin | 02/03/04
I have one big problem with your statement  JoeMama_z | 02/03/04
ZIP files  pschroeder@... | 02/04/04
in my origional post....  JoeMama_z | 02/04/04
antivirus  pschroeder@... | 02/04/04
Unless your anti virus updates every day.  JoeMama_z | 02/05/04
Daily updates  pschroeder@... | 02/05/04
P.L.B.A.C. Virus  JoeMama_z | 02/05/04
So what was that MyDoom thingy  FilledOut | 02/03/04
What it was  tic swayback | 02/03/04
Sorry  FilledOut | 02/03/04
Hey Kids  Fred Flintsone | 02/03/04
It Shows that Microsoft Has Near-Zero Security  brenthawkinsmd | 02/03/04
What mail software has built in Virus protection?  PeteS_z | 02/03/04
some do not  JWatson77 | 02/06/04
Corporate vs. Home users  jfrankcarr | 02/03/04
What a sad state of affairs.  No_Ax_to_Grind | 02/03/04
Actually the Internet was a DoD/DARPA project...  B.O.F.H. | 02/03/04
It started well before that.  No_Ax_to_Grind | 02/03/04
History lesson  B.O.F.H. | 02/03/04
Interesting turn of events  tic swayback | 02/03/04
Just hilarious  nograin | 02/03/04
SpongeWare  pj-xmesh | 02/03/04
We'll let you answer the phone  jfrankcarr | 02/03/04
Stop it! You can't use common sense here!!!  No_Ax_to_Grind | 02/03/04
well...  yucantrak | 02/03/04
True  JWatson77 | 02/06/04
Short coming in MS products  grumpy_trumpy | 02/03/04
Short coming in Victoria Secrets products  No_Ax_to_Grind | 02/03/04
Linux - a Burka for your computer?  jfrankcarr | 02/03/04
You still don't "get it" do you.  No_Ax_to_Grind | 02/03/04
Well, to use another analogy  jfrankcarr | 02/03/04
Congratulations - you get it  Harry Bardal | 02/03/04
Product Flaws  tic swayback | 02/03/04
The point is, blaming the victim.  No_Ax_to_Grind | 02/03/04
Should the user shoulder any responsibility?  tic swayback | 02/03/04
But...  quietLee | 02/04/04
I agree  JWatson77 | 02/06/04
How's that again?  pschroeder@... | 02/03/04
No Spam from Zombie attackers  ratatat62 | 02/03/04
Education of the END USER is the only solution  morgaine2003 | 02/04/04
Why Email Executables?  dadon | 02/04/04
Business reasons  pschroeder@... | 02/04/04
Why Email Executables?  dadon | 02/05/04
FTP  pschroeder@... | 02/05/04
Fighting Fire With Fire  LAMski | 02/08/04
Fix Email, not OS  DGSteig | 02/09/04
Wrong solution! Wrong target! Wrong thinking!  harperwill@... | 02/09/04
problem is between keyboard and chair...  absentia | 02/09/04
my Doom  a8a09923@... | 02/09/04
Oh well, sh** happens ...  Shodan_z | 02/13/04

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