|
The SirCam worm continued
to gain momentum Monday, carrying with it the potential not only
to slow corporate e-mail servers but also to send along company
secrets.
The worm, which cropped up last week,
continued to infect systems across the world over the weekend.
"It's not quite a 'Love Bug,'
but it's spreading very virulently," said Vincent Weafer, director
of software maker Symantec's Antivirus Research Center in Santa
Monica, Calif. Symantec rates the worm a four on its scale of one
to five, with five being the most dangerous.
Zachary Gaulkin, editor of news site MaineToday.com, said he arrived
at work Monday to find thousands of infected e-mails, some with
attachments as large as a couple of megabytes each.
"I had 3,200 in my in-box this
a.m., and they are still coming in," Gaulkin said in an e-mail
interview.
Like many other worms, SirCam spreads
by e-mailing copies of itself to everyone in the infected computer's
Microsoft Outlook address book. An added twist with SirCam is that
the worm sends a random file from the infected computer's hard drive,
potentially sending confidential business data or embarrassing personal
information along with it. The subject line matches the name of
the file being sent.
"That's a far more serious consequence
for a person or business," Weafer said. "Once a document
is gone from your organization, it's gone."
Pennsylvania e-mail user Carl Schaad
said he had received numerous infected messages by Monday morning,
including many with sensitive attachments. "I've already received
memos, resumes, job listings and, in one case, a Visa number in
a letter written to Amazon.com," he said.
Worm-infected messages received by
CNET News.com have included titles such as "Dear Diary,"
"expense distribution," "Wayne Gretzky" and
"Pork with Leeks and Egg."
One factor limiting the likelihood
that such files will actually be read is the fact that most network
administrators set their e-mail gateways to delete infected files.
However, the settings can be changed to allow worms to be removed
and the infected files opened.
Weafer said the company received about
400 new reports of the worm Monday morning from customers and those
who use its Web site. That's about the same number that came in
on Thursday and Friday.
Network Associates' NAI Labs on Monday
upgraded the worm to a level of 'high risk' from its previous 'medium
risk' designation, noting the virus can be spread not only to addresses
listed in the Windows address book files but also those stored in
a Web browser's cache files.
Chris Ashurst, a resource management
consultant in British Columbia, considers himself lucky that he
didn't infect his friends and colleagues after receiving the file
on Friday.
Ashurst said he considered opening
the file but decided it was a bit cryptic. When the next message
from the same address was another copy of the same large attachment,
he decided to put them both in the trash can and empty it.
"I'm also the local, self-taught
amateur system admin guy for the office, and luckily I managed to
alert the rest of the office before they got infected, too,"
Ashurst said in an e-mail interview.
Kim Kruse of Huntsville, Ala., said
a deluge of SirCam messages made it hard for her to do anything
online Monday. "I am on a dial-up (Internet account), and each
file is about 185-200 kilobytes, so it is really clogging up my
speed when it downloads," she wrote in an e-mail interview.
"It has taken almost an hour to check my mail this morning
It
just keeps coming in like an e-mail bomb."
British e-mail screening specialist
MessageLabs reported seeing 7,129 copies of the worm as of noon
Monday British time.
"Although we have seen significant
numbers of this virus in the U.S., we believe that Europe is still
waiting to feel the brunt of the SirCam virus," MessageLabs
Chief Technology Officer Mark Sunner said in a statement.
Although SirCam continues to spread,
it appears to be getting caught before it can do much damage.
"We're seeing it bounce off the
firewall," said David Perry, global director of education for
antivirus software maker Trend Micro. "I am not seeing any
reports of destructiveness."
Perry noted that while most viruses
appear to come from someone the recipient knows, this one can also
come from strangers because it uses both address books and information
stored in the Web browser's cache files to search for e-mail addresses.
"If you visit a Web page and
there is in the HTML (code) an e-mail address included...then that
email will be among the recipients if the virus is executed on your
machine," Perry said.
As a result, SirCam is hitting individuals
as well as corporations that use Microsoft Outlook. Trend Micro
said late Monday that 2,117 people had reported infections to its
Web site in the preceding 24 hours.
"That's up substantially in the
past couple of hours," Perry said. "It's still overshadowed
by an outbreak of the Love Letter.A virus in Africa."
So far, the worm still can be recognized
because the text of the message contains one of three messages in
either Spanish or English. They are "Hi! How are You?"
"I send you this file in order to have your advice" and
"See you later. Thanks."
MessageLabs said the English body
text was present in 86 percent of the copies it received, with the
remaining 14 percent bearing the Spanish translations.
Typically, variants crop up in which
the body text of a worm is changed, but Weafer said so far he has
seen only the single strain of SirCam.
"I would not be surprised if
we did see variants," he said.
While SirCam's self-propagation is
typical of a worm, it also has several characteristics of a virus,
including the ability to attach itself to files.
Besides sending torrents of e-mail,
SirCam can perform several destructive acts based on a combination
of arcane PC settings and chance. If the infected PC uses the European
date format (day/month/year), for example, there is a 1-in-20 chance
that the worm will delete all files and folders on the hard drive
on 16th October.
The worm is also "network aware,"
Symantec reported, meaning it will search for network resources
and attempt to propagate itself to attached systems.
|