Anna virus author comes forward

Published: 15 February 2001 y., Thursday
A Dutch virus writer known as OnTheFly admitted Tuesday to writing the Anna Kournikova virus, as Excite@Home compiled evidence against a subscriber in the Netherlands who is believed to be the same person."I didn't do it for fun," OnTheFly stated in a Web posting Tuesday. "I never wanted to harm the people who opened the attachment. But after all: it's their own fault they got infected." The statement confirmed that OnTheFly used a readily available virus-writing tool, known as the Vbs Worm Generator, to create the Anna Kournikova virus, but exonerated the tool's author of aiding him. Meanwhile, a source at Excite@Home has acknowledged that the company is trying to identify and ban a Dutch subscriber who appears to be OnTheFly. A previous virus, known as Iwa, had been posted to the alt.comp.virus.source.code newsgroup using Excite@Home Netherlands' network."We are working on it," said the Excite@Home source, who asked not to be named. "It is a clear violation of the acceptable use policy. We will come down hard and fast."The information connecting OnTheFly and the Excite@Home subscriber had first been found by Richard Smith, chief technology officer of the Privacy Foundation and a key online detective in the Melissa virus case two years ago. Also known as VBS/SST, VBS_Kalamar and VBS/OnTheFly, the Anna Kournikova virus initially poses as an attachment-- AnnaKournikova.jpg.vbs--that has been included in an e-mail with one of several similar subject lines.
Šaltinis: two.digital.cnet.com
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

12 New Mobile Processors

CeBIT: AMD Jump-Starts Competition In Thin-And-Light Notebook Market; Unveils 12 New Mobile Processors more »

search.lt news

search.lt presents newest links more »

Microsoft explores self-managing software

The company plans to unveil the initiative, called Dynamic Systems Initiative (DSI), at a Las Vegas conference next week when it debuts its new systems management tools more »

CeBit cleans up with new tech

Oracle deal: Good omen for Linux group? more »

DSL Leads Global Connections

Global DSL subscriptions nearly doubled during 2002, from 18.8 million to 35.9 million more »

Password-stealing e-mails spread

Scam widens; latest seeks Discover Card accounts more »

“Chief” level event

The ICT World Forum @ CeBIT 2003 more »

Deloder worm leaves behind two Trojan horses

The worm uses infected copies of remote-access app VNC and Internet-communications app IRC more »

Intel's New Wireless Platform: Centrino

After years of working with code-named chipsets and bundling the processors on a new platform, Intel Corp. Wednesday officially took the wraps of its latest Centrino technology more »

Two main problems

Europe finds MS guilty, but wonders what to do about it more »