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Sober variant on rise, security firm warns |
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Monday, 28 November 2005 |
The latest variant of the Sober worm is aiming for the top virus of the year spot, with a staggering one in 14 e-mails circulated on the Internet containing it as of this morning, antivirus vendor Sophos PLC said.
Around 85% of all viruses reported to Sophos are what the company calls Sober-Z, up from around 60% last week, said Graham Cluley, senior technology consultant. Sober-Z ranks as the third most prevalent virus for the year, behind No. 1 Netsky-P and No. 2 Zafi-D, he said.
"It isnt slowing down," Cluley said. "At the moment, its getting worse."
It first appeared around Nov. 22 using several forms of social engineering to trick users into executing an attachment. Messages purporting to be from the FBI warn recipients that they have been visiting illegal Web sites and ask them to read a list of attached questions.
Other versions pretend to be from the CIA or to offer video clips of Paris Hilton and Nicole Richie from the TV show The Simple Life. While most antivirus vendors have updates that can remove the worm, the clever social engineering ploys are still effective, Cluley said.
"I think the problem is there are some people who simply dont have protected computers and are spewing this out to other people," he said.
The worm, which is believed to have originated in Germany, scans hard drives for e-mail addresses and also tries to shut off security software, according to Sophos. |