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Archive for September 26th, 2006

NEW YORK — In the past, virus writers seeking fame and attention wrote their malicious programs to spread as quickly and broadly as possible, boasting to colleagues when they managed to cripple hundreds of thousands of computers worldwide in a matter of hours.

But now, many writers are driven by money instead. They write code to turn the computers of unsuspecting individuals into “botnets” — networks for spreading junk e-mail or stealing financial data from others.

Security experts find that some are even taking measures to make sure their programs don’t spread too quickly or too broadly, lest they get detected and blocked.

“If they are able to stay active longer, they make more money,” said Alfred Huger, senior director of engineering with the security response team at Symantec Corp., a software vendor that issued its twice-annual state-of-security report Monday.

Not too long ago, he said, a single person took control of as many as 400,000 computers at once with the help of malicious programs. Today, the average is less than 1,000, making such networks more difficult to track and shut down.

Huger said spammers have been compiling e-mail lists specific to geographic areas, by targeting a single Internet service provider that serves a particular region or by combing mailing lists devoted to a city’s happenings. Messages sent to those lists can be used for scams or the spread of malicious programs, such as those for stealing data.

Virus writers have also judiciously used Web sites with software vulnerabilities allowing for the spread of malicious code, Huger said. They will remove the malicious programs once enough users are infected and restore the malware later, he said.

“They are very careful about the spread,” he said.

Many of the newer viruses spread primarily through social engineering — tricking a user into opening an e-mail attachment by making a message appear legitimate.

Although virus writers have long used that technique, many had been trying to overcome delays inherent with the need for any user intervention, taking advantage of system flaws to automatically spread their programs.

Network worms such as 2004’s “Sasser” exploited flaws in Microsoft Corp.’s Windows operating system, automatically scanning the Internet for computers with the vulnerability and sending copies of themselves there. But the rapid spread also triggered rapid- response alerts among security vendors and prompted network operators to prioritize applying fixes to the Windows flaws.

High-profile threats, often more an annoyance than an effort to set up armies of rogue computers, are typically contained within a day or two.

By contrast, botnet computers can stay active for months.

Copyright C 2006 Deseret News Publishing Co.
Provided by ProQuest Information and Learning Company. All rights Reserved.

Information provided by: Findarticles.com

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It was herpes zoster that did David Gest’s noggin in, not Liza Minnelli’s (allegedly vodka-fueled) rage. So says New York State Supreme Court JusticeJane Solomon, who yesterday threw out the always fabulous-looking Gest’s $10 mil civil assault lawsuit against his estranged wife. Gest claims Minnelli beat him around the head and torso so viciously during their less-than-idyllic time together that he had to be hospitalized.

The judge ruled that Gest’s doctor failed to rebut Minnelli’s medical expert, who said the 53-year-old producer’s headaches were caused by the herpes zoster virus, which causes shingles. Gest’s lawyer, Lorraine Nadel, said she will appeal the ruling. The circus sideshow of a couple wed March 16, ‘02, under the big top with Michael Jackson as best man and Elizabeth Taylor as maid of honor. They separated in July ‘03, and their divorce case is pending. Hasselhoff’s daughter treated Confusion, and much darkness this weekend …


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ALMATY (AFP) — Sixty-one children are now known to have been infected with the AIDS virus in southern Kazakhstan as a result of medical negligence, the health ministry said. Five of them have died. “As of today we have detected 61 children infected with the HIV virus in southern Kazakhstan, of whom five have died,” ministry spokesman Moris Abdulin told AFP.

The Kazakh public prosecutor said it was suing the former regional health director and his two deputies for gross negligence. The widening scandal has already led to the sacking of Health Minister Erbolat Dosayev and the governor of southern Kazakhstan, Bolat Jylkyshyev. Earlier on Tuesday the ministry had reported 58 infections and four deaths, all in children who had been admitted to hospital in the region. The health authorities said it appeared the children had become …


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