[Full-Disclosure] RE: MS SQL WORM IS DESTROYING INTERNET BLOCK PORT 1434!

From: Richard M. Smith (rmsat_private)
Date: Sat Jan 25 2003 - 15:11:12 PST

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    However, this worm might not be so harmless as it appears because of
    collateral damage:
    
       Bank of America ATMs Disrupted by Virus
     
    http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&ncid=578&e=3&cid=569&u=/nm/2
    0030125/tc_nm/tech_virus_dc
    
       "SEATTLE (Reuters) - Bank of America Corp. said on 
       Saturday that customers at a majority of its 13,000 
       automatic teller machines were unable to process 
       customer transactions after a malicious computer worm 
       nearly froze Internet traffic worldwide."
    
    Richard M. Smith
    http://www.ComputerBytesMan.com
    
    -----Original Message-----
    From: Jason Coombs [mailto:jasoncat_private] 
    Sent: Saturday, January 25, 2003 4:41 PM
    To: Jay D. Dyson; Bugtraq
    Subject: RE: MS SQL WORM IS DESTROYING INTERNET BLOCK PORT 1434!
    
    
    Jay Dyson wrote:
    >	And to think...up until tonight, I thought the vulnerabilities
    > that paved the way for Nimda were the worst that Microsoft could do
    > to the net.community.  They've really topped themselves this time.
    
    As of now we don't know who wrote the worm, but we do know that it looks
    like a concept worm with no malicious payload. There is a good argument
    to
    be made in favor of such worms. Whomever did write this worm could have
    done
    severe damage beyond unfocused DDoS and chose not to do so. One would
    expect
    intelligence agencies in developed countries to write and release
    precisely
    this type of concept worm as a form of mass inoculation against
    malicious
    attacks.
    
    Before you get upset at your vendor, or anyone else's, consider the
    bigger
    picture and recognize the increased security hardening the Internet just
    received. Belief in this silver lining shouldn't be taken too far, of
    course, but flaming anyone over an event like this is misplaced
    considering
    the number of infosec experts who would probably have agreed to write
    this
    worm if approached by their nations' government with proof that an
    adversary
    was planning to cause severe harm by exploiting the W32/SQLSlammer
    vulnerability.
    
    Sincerely,
    
    Jason Coombs
    jasoncat_private
    
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