Software can now produce encrypted worms
Published:
15 March 2001 y., Thursday
Perhaps buoyed by his recent notoriety, the creator of the tool that spawned the so-called Anna Kournikova virus last month has released an updated version of his worm-generation software.
A BRAZILIAN HACKER known only as [K]alamar has refined his software to the point that it can now produce worms scrambled with two types of encryption, an anti-deletion function and the ability to carry a payload of an executable file. The software has reportedly surfaced on several Web sites.
The spotlight first shone on [K]alamar in February when a Dutch cracker loosed a VBS worm that masqueraded as a photo of Russian tennis star Anna Kournikova. The suspect, known as OnTheFly, used [K]alamar’s previous worm-making software to create the virus, which spread quickly around the globe. Officials at security vendor Finjan Software Inc. said they reviewed the new tool and believe it has the potential to create worms that are much more malicious and harder to track than those that have come before.
Meanwhile, the tool’s author makes an attempt to distance himself from any damage that users of his software may cause. In an “Agreement” statement riddled with spelling and grammatical errors, [K]alamar writes: “You have to agree to take full responsability of any damage caused by the files that you could create with this program...”
Šaltinis:
eWEEK
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.
The most popular articles
Software company announced new structure_ of it_s business.
more »
After weeks of preholiday exuberance, some online retailing stocks have taken a nosedive.
more »
Internet retail sites experienced the highest growth in popularity of any category of Internet sites in the six months up to the end of November 1999.
more »
ZyXEL Communications Will Demonstrate ADSL Interoperability with Major DSLAM Partners at International 2000 Consumer Electronics Show
more »
Internet telephony soared in popularity during 1999, with more than 12 times the number of calls made over the Internet last year than in 1998.
more »
Also, Microsoft breaks up, Web-only firms fail, and dot.coms make money in 2000, says IDC analyst.
more »
Local Kozmo.com customers got billed for items they never ordered.
more »
A post-holiday online retailing survey by Ernst & Young found that 26 percent of those polled made an online purchase during the holidays.
more »
Wal-Mart opens doors to new online store.
more »
search.lt presents newest links
more »
Microsoft experienced two glitches with its consumer Internet services, the Hotmail Internet e-mail service and the MoneyCentral.com financial services site.
more »