[gardeners] Fwd: "I Love You" email virus sacks computers
Seana Ames (gardeners@globalgarden.com)
Thu, 04 May 2000 15:11:21 MDT
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Subject: "I Love You" email virus sacks computers
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Here is the latest on that virus
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"I Love You" email virus sacks computers
May 4, 2000, 1:20 p.m. PT
http://home.cnet.com/category/0-1003-200-1812992.html
A computer virus that experts warn could be
more disruptive than the notorious Melissa virus has hit computers in Asia
and Europe and is quickly spreading across the United States via email.
The virus, which includes the message "I Love You" or "Love Letter" in
the email subject line, was first spotted in Asia early this morning,
according to security systems firm F-Secure.
According to security analyst Elias Levy of Security Focus, the
virus contained a possible clue to the source of the infection that points
to the Phillipines.
According to Levy, the worm contains the following comment: "rem barok
-loveletter(vbe) <i hate go to school> rem by: spyder / ispyder@mail.com /
@GRAMMERSoft Group / Manila,Philippines".
Attempts to contact ispyder by CNET News.com were unsuccessful.
Antivirus experts were amazed by the power of the virus. "I've been doing
antivirus research for the past nine years, and it hasn't been this bad,"
said Mikko Hypponen, a research manager at F-Secure, who also noted that the
first report received of the virus came in at around 9:00 a.m. GMT (2 a.m.
PT) on Thursday from Norway. "It's spreading so fast, so globally, and twice
as widespread as the Melissa virus."
By 1 p.m. GMT (6 a.m. PT), F-Secure had reports from more than 20
countries, he said.
The virus arrives in an email that includes an attachment called
"Love-Letter-For-You," according to F-Secure. The virus targets people who
use Microsoft’s Outlook email program--a widely used default email client at
companies--to send messages with the virus to everyone listed in that
person's address book.
The email virus has infected computer systems across Asia, Europe and the
United States and is spreading fast, according to representatives from
many companies.
Hypponen, who called the Love virus "destructive," said the most damage
could be to media houses--including radio stations, magazines and
advertising agencies--that have lost photo archives and music files, as the
virus directly attacks those types of files.
"A large publishing house that got hit with the virus this morning lost
their complete photo archives," Hypponen said. "The problem is it
automatically deletes your (image and music) files. (Antivirus upgrades) can
remove the virus but can't undo the damage. If you don't have back-ups to
your files, you lose."
A number of security sites have posted instructions for removing the
virus, but many were not easily accessible, presumably due to heavy traffic.
Those sites include:
-- http://download.mcafee.com/
-- http://www.datafellows.com/download-purchase/updates.html
-- http://www.antivirus.com/download/pattern.asp
-- http://www.sophos.com/downloads/ide/index.html#loveleta
-- http://www.thepope.org/index.pl?node_id=140
One mid-sized Web site reported that the worm wreaked havoc on its
computers today, but that the public site was spared the Windows-specific
worm because the site is served off a Linux computer.
"It was taking any MP3 files and it was making duplicates of itself
with a VBScript extension, and any '.jpg' files on our server were being
transformed to VBScript," said the site's administrator, who did not want
the site identified. "We've got an employee who got nailed heavily, and
every '.jpg' graphic has been converted to a '.vbs' file."
One site heavily dependent on the integrity of its MP3
files--MP3.com--has apparently weathered the "Love" bug unscathed. A
representative said the company's information systems administrators sent
out a warning to employees about the worm early in the day, and no damage
had yet been reported.
Sources said that several government organizations in the Washington,
D.C., area, including the Pentagon, the Federal Reserve, the Coast Guard
and the Defense Department, have been hit by the email virus.
"We certainly have seen scattered instances of it throughout the Defense
Department, but I don't have any overall assessment at this time," said
department spokeswoman Susan Hansen. "Our joint task force on computer
network defense has this under consideration. I can confirm that, like many
other organizations, we too...have seen this virus."
Two people in Washington this morning explained how quickly the virus
spread.
The first, a lobbyist on Capitol Hill, said she opened an "I Love You"
email and realized immediately it contained a virus. "I tried to close
Outlook right away, but it wouldn't shut down," said the lobbyist, who asked
not to be identified. In the 10 or so seconds she waited before turning off
the computer, she estimates the virus emailed copies to half her address
book, or about 100 people working in different federal agencies.
A public relations manager manager for a large computer maker doing
business with the Department of Defense said that by mid-morning he had
received more than 50 virus-infected email messages, mainly from Washington
but from all over the country.
An FBI representative added, "The FBI is currently assessing any impact
this has had both nationally and internationally." The representative would
not say whether the agency had been infected by the virus, however.
The National Infrastructure Protection Center, which has helped
coordinate the investigation into denial-of-service attacks, today issued a
warning about the virus.
Once opened, the email virus overwrites existing local script and
HTML files, as well as picture and music files, with its own code,
F-Secure said. Files with extensions ".jpg," ".jpeg," ".mp3" and ".mp2"
are overwritten, the company said.
Last year, the Melissa virus clogged corporate email servers across
the country, causing more than $80 million in damage. A New Jersey
resident, David Smith, was arrested and charged with disseminating the
original Melissa virus.
News.com's Paul Festa contributed to this report.
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