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  • SobigF. virus

    Just in case any of you see something like this in your inbox:


    [Superiormuscle] {Virus?} RE: Details

    Delete it, do not open it. Junked about 40-50 of these today already from another board.

    Sobig fastest e-mail infection ever
    MSNBC News Services


    A computer virus that circulated across the Internet this week, hard on the heels of another nasty online infection, is the fastest e-mail outbreak ever, an antivirus company said. The Sobig.F virus, which continued to spread like wildfire Thursday, has been blamed for computer disruptions at businesses, colleges and other institutions worldwide.

    MESSAGELABS, which scans e-mail for viruses, said that within 24 hours it had scanned more than 1 million copies of this latest variant of the Sobig virus.
    "It's unprecedented in our history. ... It's a pretty frightening statistic. And the next incarnation could be even worse," said MessageLabs' chief information analyst Paul Wood.

    Sobig.F is the fifth version of the virus, which has been including an expiration date with each variant. The prior version expired last month; Sobig.F is set to expire Sept. 10.

    Sobig does not physically damage computers, files or critical data, but it ties up computer and networking resources. One in 17 e-mails sent around the world since Monday had been affected by Sobig, Wood said, with some fearing the virus could increase global e-mail traffic by as much as 60 percent, slowing the Internet to a crawl.

    HOW IT SPREADS
    One reason is that the e-mail messages by which the virus spreads are forged to appear to come from genuine Internet users. Many antivirus systems then send an automatic alert back to the Internet user, telling them they are infected. Users whose e-mail addresses have been thus forged can then receive hundreds of these virus alerts, adding to Internet traffic jams.

    MessageLabs chief technology officer Mark Sunner also said the virus was helped along because it essentially had e-mail software built in. Previous ones relied on existing software packages like Microsoft's Outlook and did not spread as quickly among users of rival e-mail software.

    Antivirus experts think the author may be using the worm to construct an elaborate network of hijacked computers that can be used to send spam.

    The SoBig virus spreads when unsuspecting computer users open file attachments in e-mails that contain such familiar headings as "Thank you," "Re: Details" or "Re: approved."

    Once the file is opened, SoBig scours the computer for e-mail addresses, checking in Word documents, Internet logs and e-mail inboxes. Designed like mass-mailing spam programs, it then sends scores of messages to the addresses it has collected.

    PREVIOUS RECORD

    Before Sobig.F, the previous record for an e-mail infection was "Klez," with about 250,000 copies spotted during its first 24 hours earlier this year, Sunner said. There have been faster outbreaks on the Internet, but those circulated through networking functions built into Windows operating systems.

    The "Slammer" worm struck more than 75,000 computers in just 10 minutes in January, with the number of infected computers doubling every 8.5 seconds, according to researchers at the University of California and other institutions. It went on to infect hundreds of thousands more. E-mail viruses like Sobig can hit the same computer multiple times, so the number of infections are not directly comparable.

    NETWORKS SLAMMED
    Removing all that extra e-mail takes time and resources. The University of Wisconsin-Madison, for example, had to shut down outside access to its e-mail system Wednesday.

    "We were removing 30,000 bad e-mails an hour," said **** Savoy, an information security officer at the school.

    In India's high-tech city of Bangalore, dozens of cybercafes shut down and home computers blacked out. Some cafes were hit because their service provider was affected, but others got the virus in machines using Windows operating systems.

    The owner of one of the Internet's most popular e-mail lists, technologist David Farber, was livid about Sobig.

    "I got 1300 junk e-mails 'delivered' this AM," he said in a message to subscribers Thursday. "Find the person and put him/her in jail."

    SEPARATE WORM STILL DAMAGING
    Meanwhile, the fallout of the "MSBlast" or "Blaster" worm continued. The outbreak began 10 days ago with the so-called "Blaster" or "LovSan" worm which, by some estimates, infected more than 500,000 computers running the latest version of Microsoft Windows, the world's dominant operating system.

    This week, the "Welchia" or "Nachi" worm surfaced. It masquerades as a benign program that attempts to fortify computers against infection from Blaster.

    But it packs a punch. It clogs computer networks, slowing Internet connections and even knocking systems offline. Nachia's victims include the European engineering firm ABB, Air Canada and the U.S. Navy and Marine Corps.

    Thursday, experts were again urging computer users to shore up their machines with anti-virus software and to delete suspicious-looking e-mails, hoping that preventive medicine would stop this wave before the next round.

    "This has gone to a whole new level. To have this sort of barrage coming at you is a nightmare for an IT technician who has to take care of a corporate network," said Graham Cluley, senior technical consultant for security firm Sophos Anti-Virus.






    The Associated Press and Reuters contributed to this report.

  • #2
    I had 31 e-mails from FitnessGeared accounts in my Operamail e-mail this morning....

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    • #3
      yup FG is packing my Cyber-rights right now , I had 27 of them .

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      • #4
        no fricken wonder when I went to college to register the damn line was so fricken big. Computers were out

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        • #5
          Originally posted by YellowJacket
          I had 31 e-mails from FitnessGeared accounts in my Operamail e-mail this morning....
          Can't block it either, all the addresses are different.

          Just gotta keep deleting.
          :mad:

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          • #6
            i set up a rules wizard to automaticaly delete the email if it contains a certain word that i chose.

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            • #7
              There are multiple Subject lines.
              I work in Network security and a few accounts that are set up just to see wide spead some of the viruses are.
              I got over 500 of this in the last 2 days.

              The subject lines of these messages include
              Re: Details
              Re: Approved
              Re: Thank you!
              Re: That movie
              Re: Wicked screensaver
              Re: Your application

              The body of the message reads:
              "See the attached file for details." or "Please see the attached
              file for details."

              If you receive an e-mail with any one of the subject lines listed
              above, DO NOT OPEN the attachment. You should DELETE the e-mail. Do
              not forward it to anyone else.

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              • #8
                You guys are getting off easy. I had 38 last nigt and 44 waiting this morning. Ive been deleting 5-10 of them every hour.

                I'd like to find the little prick who started this one and snap his neck.

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                • #9
                  Originally posted by Tinfish
                  i set up a rules wizard to automaticaly delete the email if it contains a certain word that i chose.
                  Excellent idea, I forgot about that option.

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                  • #10
                    Originally posted by Tinfish
                    i set up a rules wizard to automaticaly delete the email if it contains a certain word that i chose.
                    Very limited in Hotmail, I can catch about 98% in Outlook. Unfortunately, Hotmail is my primary email account.

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                    • #11
                      fuckin viruses

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                      • #12
                        my cyber-rights is full, i'm scared someone hold me! LOL

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                        • #13
                          Yep im getting them also. From what I read, it will expire Sept 10th so we will have this problem until then.

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                          • #14
                            fucking virus sucks balls, cause i was on my msn hotmail, and all were from FG. dAMN VIRUS SUX BALLS:mad: People have no other life thatn to ruin other peoples computers.

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                            • #15
                              yeah my zip lip is basically frozen=-[

                              Comment

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