[ISN] New version of the Sober worm masquerades as Microsoft update

From: InfoSec News (isn@private)
Date: Tue Mar 09 2004 - 00:37:33 PST

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    http://www.computerworld.com/securitytopics/security/story/0,10801,90899,00.html
    
    By Paul Roberts
    MARCH 08, 2004 
    IDG NEWS SERVICE
    
    Antivirus software companies warned customers about a new variant of
    the Sober e-mail worm that began spreading on the Internet today and
    masquerades as a Microsoft Corp. software update.
    
    Sober.D is the latest version of a worm that first appeared in
    October. The new worm poses as a software patch that will remove the
    MyDoom virus from infected Windows systems, said antivirus company
    F-Secure Corp. in Helsinki, Finland.
    
    F-Secure first detected the new worm variant in Germany early today.  
    The company rated the virus a "Level 2" threat, indicating "large
    infections," the company said.
    
    Like its predecessors, Sober.D spreads by skimming e-mail addresses
    from victims' computers, then mailing copies of itself to those
    addresses. Sober.D also adapts its message for German-speaking
    audiences, inserting a German-language version of its pitch message
    into e-mail addresses belonging to German domains, such as those
    ending in .de, F-Secure said.
    
    Copies of the Sober.D worm arrive in e-mail messages with the subject
    "Microsoft Alert: Please Read!" or "Microsoft Alarm: Bitte Lesen!"  
    said the antivirus company. The worm file is embedded in file
    attachments with the .exe or .zip file extension and names such as
    "Patch," "MS-Security" and "UpDate," F-Secure said.
    
    Once the worm file has been opened, the virus places a copy of itself
    on the infected machine's hard drive and modifies the Windows
    configuration so that the worm file is launched each time Windows
    starts, antivirus companies said.
    
    When run, the worm mimics a legitimate software patch, displaying a
    pop-up message indicating that the "patch has been successfully
    installed." For machines that are already infected, the worm displays
    a message saying that the "patch does not need to be installed on this
    system," F-Secure said.
    
    It is common for worm authors to dress up their creations as software
    updates from Microsoft. Recent worms, including Swen and Gruel, have
    posed as official correspondence from the software company.
    
    In response, Microsoft declared that it never distributes software
    updates using e-mail and has published guidelines for identifying
    legitimate e-mail from the company.
    
    Antivirus companies posted software updates to detect the new worm and
    recommended that customers update their software as soon as possible
    to prevent against Sober.D infection.
    
     
    
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