Virus set for Jan. 1, 2000
Published:
9 December 1999 y., Thursday
Although your computer might be inoculated against the Y2K bug, there is a new virus floating about that will change home page settings to pornographic sites and then wipe out hard drives at the millennium moment. The virus--the latest in a series of increasingly flamboyant viruses that prey on vulnerabilities in Microsoft desktop software--is called W32/Mypics.worm and is triggered by the date Jan. 1, 2000. The worm, limited to Microsoft Outlook and Internet Explorer users, is received as an
email attachment disguised as a picture. Once opened, it infects the host computer and attempts to send itself using Microsoft Outlook to up to 50 people in the users_ address book. It also changes the Home page in Internet Explorer to a site containing adult content, Symantec warned in an alert sent out Friday. Symantec, which discovered the virus, rates this as a medium to high-risk virus. But the damage to the unsuspecting user doesn_t truly happen until Jan. 1, 2000. The virus works by masking as a Y2K problem, which will prompt users to reboot. When an infected computer is rebooted, however, the virus will attempt to format the local hard drives and erase all data, Symantec said.
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 »
Internet cafe users in China have long been subject to an extraordinary range of controls
more »
Internet cafe users in China have long been subject to an extraordinary range of controls
more »
The European Commission said Sunday that it would not enforce a Monday deadline for Microsoft to start selling a modified version of its Windows operating system in Europe
more »
The woman who launched the controversy over electronic voting machines has formed a nonprofit consumer group that plans to investigate election officials
more »
The Chinese government is calling on Internet service providers to sign a "self-discipline pact" meant to stop the spread of information that could harm national security as defined by Beijing
more »
search.lt presents newest links
more »
The Royal Courts of Justice and six other courts around the UK have been kitted out with wireless Internet "hotspots" as part of measures to help modernise the legal system
more »
Intel on Thursday will offer an early look at its latest chipsets at a pair of events in New York and San Francisco
more »
Some useful citizen has written a virus which targets mobile phones running the Symbian operating system
more »
On
the 25-27 of May for the first time in Lithuania “Competitions of the Robots”
for the students of universities and engineers from different countries took
place in the Lithuanian Exhibition
Centre “Litexpo”. More >>>
more »