[ISN] 'High Risk' Virus Spreading Rapidly

From: InfoSec News (isnat_private)
Date: Thu Jun 05 2003 - 23:06:00 PDT

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    http://www.eweek.com/article2/0,3959,1118559,00.asp
    
    By Dennis Fisher
    June 5, 2003 
    
    A new variant of the dangerous Bugbear virus is on the loose and has 
    begun spreading rapidly. Bugbear.B is quite similar to the original 
    virus except that the new version contains a keystroke logger and is 
    capable of changing its appearance to evade detection. 
    As of about 4 p.m. EDT Thursday, MessageLabs had stopped more than 
    55,000 copies of the new strain of Bugbear, which is infecting about 
    one in every 200 pieces of e-mail, according to the company's 
    statistics. 
    
    The fast-moving Bugbear.B virus continued to spread Thursday 
    afternoon, but most of the damage has been done outside the United 
    States. England and Italy have been the hardest hit so far, according 
    to statistics compiled by New York-based e-mail security provider 
    MessageLabs Inc. 
    
    Anti-virus experts say the infection method and behavior of the virus 
    should come as no surprise. And yet, users continue to open the 
    infected attachments, wreaking havoc on corporate mail servers and 
    networks. "We can stop looking for worms of mass disruption—Bugbear.B 
    is it. The original Bugbear was amongst leading disrupters of business 
    activity in 2002, and Bugbear.B is poised to follow in its footsteps," 
    said Brad Meehan, director of product management, eTrust Threat 
    Management Solutions, at Computer Associates International Inc., in 
    Islandia, N.Y. 
    
    The virus first showed up on the Internet Wednesday, and anti-virus 
    companies say that it has been infecting PCs at an alarming rate. 
    Message Labs Inc., a New York-based e-mail security company, has 
    stopped more than 17,000 copies of the virus since last night. 
    
    Bugbear.B is the second virus to make waves this week, following in 
    the footsteps of Sobig.C, which hit the Internet on Monday. 
    
    Bugbear.B is a typical mass-mailing virus, containing its own SMTP 
    engine. The sending address and subject line on the virus-infected 
    e-mails vary widely and appear to be random. 
    
    Bugbear.B is capable of spoofing addresses in several domains, some of 
    which are high-profile companies such as Microsoft Corp., and several 
    financial concerns. 
    
    The attachment containing the virus also has a random name, but is 
    always 73.728 kb and has either a .pif, .exe or .scr file extension. 
    The text in the e-mail message varies, as well. 
    
    Once resident on a PC, the virus creates a file that stores all of the 
    keystrokes typed on the infected machine. Bugbear.B is also capable of 
    disabling several kinds of anti-virus software and personal firewalls. 
    
    Network Associates Inc.'s McAfee Security unit has classified 
    Bugbear.B as a high risk. 
    
    
    
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