Warning from FBI on Valentine Day Storm Worm


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Warning from FBI on Valentine Day Storm Worm

February 2008

The Valentine's Day campaign that the bot-building Storm Trojan horse 
has been running for weeks is running at such volume that even the FBI 
issued a warning yesterday.

"With the holiday approaching, be on the lookout for spam e-mails 
spreading the Storm Worm malicious software," the FBI said in an alert 
 posted to the home page of its Web site yesterday. "The Storm Worm 
virus has capitalized on various holidays in the last year by sending 
millions of e-mails advertising an e-card link within the text of the 
spam e-mail. Valentine's Day has been identified as the next target."

Actually, the FBI was way behind the ball. For several weeks, security 
vendors have been predicting that Storm would again use tomorrow's big 
day to dupe users into opening attachments or clicking links.

A month ago, for example, Sophos PLC noted that Storm's spam blasts -- 
messages with subject heads like "You're the One" and "Falling in Love 
with You" -- were already accounting for one in every 12 e-mails counted 
by the company's filters. The messages included an IP-address-only link 
that led to any of several compromised computers in the Storm botnet, 
said Sophos senior security analyst Mike Haro. Those PCs tried to infect 
visiting machines with an up-to-date copy of the Trojan horse, which in 
turn added them to the malware's army.

This is the second year running that Storm has exploited Valentine's 
Day. Last year, the botnet Trojan horse had made its first splash in the 
month before the holiday, and researchers have long expected its author 
or authors to return in 2008. In mid-January, for instance, Jamz Yaneza, 
research project manager at Trend Micro Inc., said early versions of 
2008's run showed that the Trojan horse's makers had learned from the 
malware's past.

"This year's version looks like a stripped-down version of last year's," 
he said in an interview last month about Storm's one-year anniversary 
. "They've optimized the way [the bot is delivered] over the past 
months," he said, citing an example of how this year's Valentine's Day 
campaign would differ from 2007's. "They've learned that there's no need 
to add an attachment."

That's exactly how things have played out in the days leading to Feb. 
14.

Trend Micro senior antivirus researcher David Sancho spelled it out in a 
post to the company's blog on Monday. "The spammed e-mail messages are 
just plain text, but contain links that lead to malicious Web sites 
displaying one of eight cute Valentine images," he said. Sancho's post 
cycled through the images that Trend Micro captured from the 
malware-serving sites.

"If you run the executable named 'valentine.exe,' your system will join 
the Storm botnet to start spamming other Internet users," Sancho 
concluded. "Not very loving of them."

..Gregg Keizer

Computer and Internet Security news provided here represents global independent resources. The information represented here is © by the stated author.

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