[ISN] SCO offers $250,000 reward for arrest of Mydoom worm author

From: William Knowles (wk@private)
Date: Wed Jan 28 2004 - 03:51:27 PST

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    http://www.computerworld.com/securitytopics/security/story/0,10801,89470,00.html
    
    Story by Ken Mingis 
    JANUARY 27, 2004
    COMPUTERWORLD
    
    The SCO Group Inc. said today it is experiencing a distributed
    denial-of-service (DDOS) attack apparently related to the Mydoom worm
    that first appeared yesterday.
    
    The company, which is embroiled in legal action against IBM over
    intellectual property rights related to its ownership of System V Unix
    code, said it is offering a reward of up to $250,000 "for information
    leading to the arrest and conviction of the individual or individuals
    responsible for creating the Mydoom virus."
    
    In a statement released late today, the company said it has been the
    target of several such DDOS attacks during the past 10 months.
    
    But the one now under way "is different and much more troubling, since
    it harms not just our company, but also damages the systems and
    productivity of a large number of other companies and organizations
    around the world," said SCO CEO Darl McBride in the statement. "The
    perpetrator of this virus is attacking SCO. ...
    
    "We do not know the origins or reasons for this attack, although we
    have our suspicions," said McBride, who did not elaborate on what
    those suspicions are. "This is criminal activity and it must be
    stopped."
    
    The company also said it is working with U.S. law enforcement
    authorities, including the U.S. Secret Service and the FBI, to try to
    determine who might be involved in the attack.
    
    The Mydoom worm, also known as Novarg and Mimail.R, is a mass-mailing
    worm that arrives via e-mail as an attachment with one of several
    possible file extensions, including .bat, .cmd, .exe, .pif, .scr or
    .zip. When a user opens the attachment, his computer becomes infected.  
    The worm is apparently designed to attack the company's Web site,
    www.sco.com, beginning on Feb. 1.
    
    Experts have said that the Mydoom worm is spreading faster than last
    year's Sobig.F, which topped the charts as the most widespread e-mail
    worm of 2003.
    
    Both Network Associates Inc. and Symantec Corp. said that when the
    attached file is executed, the worm scans the user's system for e-mail
    addresses and forwards itself to those addresses. If the victim has a
    copy of the Kazaa file-sharing application installed, it will also
    drop several files in the shared-files folder in an attempt to spread
    that way.
    
    According to Symantec, the worm also installs a "key logger" that can
    capture anything that is entered, including passwords and credit card
    numbers, and will start sending requests for data to SCO's Web site.  
    If enough requests are sent, the SCO site could be forced off-line.
    
    
    
    
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