Variants of a virus capitalizing on the popularity of
19-year-old Russian tennis player Anna Kournikova failed to add momentum to
the worm's spread Monday.
"I think it is under control at this point," said Vincent Gullotto, director
of security software maker Network Associates' antivirus emergency response
team. "It had the potential to become Love Letter-ish, but because we and
others had protection, it failed to spread too quickly."
Network Associates had seen "a few hundred" submissions of the virus from
clients, but by Monday afternoon, the rate had dropped off.
Also known as VBS/SST, VBS_Kalamar, and VBS/OnTheFly, the virus initially posed as an
attachment--
AnnaKournikova.jpg.vbs--
included in an e-mail with one of
several similar subject lines.
The virus uses Visual Basic to infect Windows systems and then on systems
with Outlook it mails itself out to the entire address book. Its ability to
mail itself out to a large number of Internet users classifies the virus as
a worm.
"It's going to be more widespread than Melissa but less than the Love Bug,"
said Vincent Weafer, director of the Symantec AntiVirus Research Center.
Melissa kicked off a new age of fast-spreading, hard-hitting worms in March
1999, when the macro virus flooded e-mail systems by using commands built
into Microsoft Word to control e-mail. David L. Smith, who pled guilty to
authoring and releasing the virus, is currently awaiting sentencing.
Last May, a Visual Basic script masquerading as a love letter spread quickly
after it was released from the Philippines. A 22-year-old computer-school
dropout, Onel de Guzman, has since been charged for crimes related to the
release of the virus. Due to the lack of laws regarding computer crime in
the Philippines, de Guzman is facing charges of credit-card fraud.
Like Melissa, the AnnaKournikova virus does not damage the systems it has
infected, said SARC's Weafer.
However, the author seems to be creating and releasing new variants, he
said. The variants of the e-mail message appeared Monday afternoon and
included e-mail messages with slightly different subject lines and
attachments that had abbreviated file names.
By late Monday, antivirus experts had seen the subject lines "Here you are
;-)," "Here you have ;o)" and "Here you go ;-)."
The variants are thought to have been created by a point-and-click program
known as the Vbs Worms Generator and authored by Kalamar, a member of the
Argentine virus underground, said experts.
While the changes may have fooled some people into opening the attachment
that contained the virus, PCs running updated antivirus software would not
be fazed, said Weafer.
Initial reports indicated that the virus' promise of a picture of the
teenage tennis heartthrob had lured a large number of people into opening
the fake image.
"Compared to the Love Bug, it's spreading twice as fast," Alex Shipp,
antivirus technologist with U.K.-based e-mail service MessageLabs, said
Monday morning.
In the first five hours after MessageLabs detected the infection, its users
had received almost 2,900 copies of the infected e-mail sent from more than
290 different domains.
Antivirus software maker Trend Micro said the virus had hit many different
types of companies. "We have heard from a government agency that has seen
200 hits per hour," spokeswoman Susan Orbuch said. "Others include a banking
institution, a major networking company, a beverage company and an
insurance company. You are not just seeing it in one sector."
Trend Micro's software detected the virus originally as VBS_KALAMAR, and
believe that Kalamar is the author of the virus creation kit.
As of 11:15 a.m. Monday, major antivirus software makers had either posted patches
to detect the virus or already detected it with a latest version.
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