First Computer Virus', Now Computer Anti-Bodies?

Turner

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It was bound to happen:

You need a free account from the LA Times to read it. Of course, since y'all a bunch of lazy bast. . . I mean, busy people, ;) I'll include the text of the story here.

'Good' PC Worm Tries to Make Bad One Squirm
Call it the Battle of the Internet Worms.

As the Blaster worm on Monday began its second week infecting computers, a variant emerged that exploits the same software vulnerability to invade PCs running Microsoft Corp.'s Windows operating system.

But instead of causing mischief, the new worm tries to disinfect machines carrying Blaster and then plug the hole that let both worms through.

In a final act of selflessness, the worm is programmed to delete itself Jan. 1.

The author of the vigilante worm — known by various names, including Nachi — is anonymous.

"There's a little bit of good Samaritan in them," said virus researcher Craig Schmugar of Network Associates Inc., one of several virus-fighting companies that warned of the noble worm after its discovery early Monday.

Those warnings were issued because any worm, no matter how well intentioned, spreads without authorization into private networks. And Nachi can harm some machines.

A company in Japan, where Nachi was spreading quickly, reported that its network crashed when many of its personal computers got the fix-it worm and tried to download Microsoft's Blaster patch simultaneously.

Nachi works only on machines running English, Chinese and Korean versions of Windows. And it tries to download patches only for Windows 2000 and Windows XP, said Joe Hartmann, director of North American anti-virus research at Trend Micro Inc.

Finally, Windows 2000 computers can utilize the patch only if an earlier update has been installed. The worm doesn't seem to know that, Hartmann said.

"It wanted to be a good worm" but fell short, he said.

Although Blaster's spread is slowing, it still is moving faster than Nachi and less good-natured variants, including one that installs a "back door" for future access by hackers.

All take advantage of a security hole discovered a month ago and publicized by Microsoft.

The malicious worms, designed to spread automatically, can trigger constant rebooting, giving users little time to fix infected machines. Blaster was designed to launch a coordinated attack on a Microsoft Web site, but it failed to disrupt much of the Internet because Microsoft disabled the target page.

As with earlier "good" worms that sought to stop Code Red and other Internet infections, Nachi may spur debate about whether an automatic inoculation is the best answer for the failure of many computer users to install fixes when new problems are discovered.

But security experts said the risks of such efforts were still too great. "There could be unwanted side effects," Schmugar said.

Microsoft has been under fire for security lapses, but spokesman Sean Sundwall said it had nothing to do with Nachi.

Discuss, please.
 
Ha! That came sooner than I thought it would. In a decade they'll be fully symbiotic.
 
I can just see some 'good samaritan' launching an anti-virus that ends up being worse then the problem. . .
 
Oh No! You said the "E" word! You've jacked my thread and made it religous! :lol:

No, I had the same thought. I fear the day that virus' get smart enough to start changing there tactics to get around firewalls and virus protection programs. It will truly be evolution, and on a scale we can closely observe.
 
Last year I was attacked by a virus that disabled my anti-virus software. It was W32/Klez-H.

Data care of Sophos.com

Additionally the worm will attempt to disable anti-virus software by stopping any of the following processes,

_AVP32
_AVPCC
NOD32
NPSSVC
NRESQ32
NSCHED32
NSCHEDNT
NSPLUGIN
NAV
NAVAPSVC
NAVAPW32
NAVLU32
NAVRUNR
NAVW32
_AVPM
ALERTSVC
AMON
AVP32
AVPCC
AVPM
N32SCANW
NAVWNT
ANTIVIR
AVPUPD
AVGCTRL
AVWIN95
SCAN32
VSHWIN32
F-STOPW
F-PROT95
ACKWIN32
VETTRAY
VET95
SWEEP95
PCCWIN98
IOMON98
AVPTC
AVE32
AVCONSOL
FP-WIN
DVP95
F-AGNT95
CLAW95
NVC95
SCAN
VIRUS
LOCKDOWN2000
Norton
Mcafee
Antivir
TASKMGR

and deleting the files

ANTI-VIR.DAT
CHKLIST.DAT
CHKLIST.MS
CHKLIST.CPS
CHKLIST.TAV
IVB.NTZ
SMART CHK.MS
SMARTCHK.CPS
AVGQT.DAT
AGUARD.DAT
 
Originally posted by ferenginar
Last year I was attacked by a virus that disabled my anti-virus software. It was W32/Klez-H.

Damn it, W32/Klez ! :rocket2:
Took me a week to get things up and running again... :mad:
 
and by doing so killed the thread.
 
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