A scrabble lover is spreading e-mails all over the world.
Published:
31 March 1999 y., Wednesday
MeThe Melissa computer virus, discovered only last Friday,has spread itself by e-mail around the world and is causing havoc for large corporations, according to security experts.It is just a macro virus but it has this additional feature of being able to get around quick.Melissa conceived in sex group
Dr Solomon_s VirusPatrol, which checks newsgroups on the Net for developing viruses, discovered Melissa in a sex newsgroup on March 26.The New York Times reported that several major US corporations shut down their mail servers on Friday night
as they became overloaded with messages created by the virus.Comments inside the macro virus identify it as "Melissa...by Kwyjibo." Computers become infected when users receive a particular e-mail and open a Word
document attached to it.The e-mail is headed: "Important Message From" and contains the sentence: "Here is that document you asked for...don_t show anyone else ;-)." the attachment is usually called list.doc.If the user launches the document, their computer becomes infected, although the worst thing that can happen apparently is if it is launched when the day equals the minute value...such as 29 minutes past on the 29th, the following message appears:
" Twenty-two points, plus triple-word-score, plus fifty points for using all my letters. Game_s over. I_m outta here."
When the document attachment is launched, a program is created which replicates the e-mail and sends it to the first 50 addresses in the Global Address Book of users running Microsoft_s Outlook personal organiser.
Microsoft, Network Associates and other anti-virus and computer security companies have issued warnings and are supplying fixes for Melissa.
Šaltinis:
Internet
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 »
The Pakistan government claims India has shut down local Internet access in the troubled region of Kashmir and is policing Internet cafes in an effort to restrict communications between Pakistan and Kashmir.
more »
A US man is being sued for allegedly posting a misleading financial information on Yahoo's! Finance bulletin board last October.
more »
Reservations company hopes technology can help identify suspected terrorists
more »
As leasing increases, company boosts earnings by giving second life to used PCs, selling returned items on the Web or stripping them for their parts.
more »
Some stores ignore security, putting consumer funds at risk
more »
All Hong Kong's 6.8 million residents will be offered free digital IDs for use in secure online transactions when a new "smart" national identity card is introduced in mid-2003.
more »
Yahoo Japan Corp said Tuesday the news most frequently searched for this year on its Web portal site was about the Sept 11 terrorist attacks on New York and Washington.
more »
Online auction leader eBay has quietly ended its much publicized Auction for America, launched as a charitable mechanism to raise $100 million in 100 days for the families of those who died Sept. 11.
more »
This week's Cybershake outlines how tourists can take a virtual tour of the White House's holiday decorations
more »
search.lt presents newest links
more »