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Computer-Virus
Writer's: A Few Bats In The Belfry? |
by:
Dean
Phillips |
"Male.
Obsessed with computers. Lacking a girlfriend.
Aged
14 to 34. Capable of creating chaos worldwide."
The above description is the profile of
the average computer-virus writer, according
to Jan Hruska, the chief executive of British-based
Sophos PLC, the world's fourth-largest anti-virus
solutions provider.
"They have a chronic lack of girlfriends,
are usually
socially inadequate and are drawn compulsively
to write self-
replicating codes. It's a form of digital
graffiti to them,"
Hruska added.
To create and spread cyber infections, virus
writers explore
known bugs in existing software, or look
for vulnerabilities
in new versions.
With more and more new OS (operating system)
versions, there
will be more new forms of viruses, as every
single software
or OS will carry new features, and new executables
that can
be carriers of the infection.
Executables are files that launch applications
in a
computer's operating system, and feature
more prominently in
new platforms like Microsoft's Windows 2000
and Windows XP
than they did in the older DOS or Windows
3.1.
Virus writers also share information to
create variants of
the same infection, such as the Klez worm,
which has been
among the world's most prolific viruses.
The Klez, a mass-mailing worm that originated
in November
2001, propagates via e-mail using a wide
variety of messages
and destroys files on local and network
drives.
But the news gets worse. Recent events have
uncovered what
may be a new trend: spammers paying virus
writers to create
worms that plant an open proxy, which the
spammer then can
use to forward spam automatically. Many
suspect this
occurred with the SoBig virus.
The Sobig worms, began spreading in the
early part of
2003. The unusual thing about them was they
contained an
expiration date and were given a short life
cycle to see how
features worked in the wild.
Having an expiration date also makes the
virus more
dangerous, because most people would have
been alerted to
the new worm within a few weeks and anti-virus
definitions
would have been updated.
A variant of Sobig, Sobig-F was so efficient
that just a few
infected machines could send thousands of
messages. Sobig-F
created a denial-of-service effect on some
networks, as e-
mail servers became clogged with copies
of the worm.
According to Mikko Hypponen, manager of
anti-virus research
for Finland-based F-Secure Corp, Sobig-F
sent an estimated 300 million copies of
itself.
Computer Economics, Inc. states, "Nearly
63,000 viruses have
rolled through the Internet, causing an
estimated $65
billion in damage." However criminal prosecutions
have been
few, penalties light and just a handful
of people have gone
to prison for spreading the destructive
bugs.
Why is so little being done? Antiquated
laws and, for many
years, as crazy as it sounds, a "wink, wink"
or even admiring attitude toward virus creators.
One person has been sent to prison in the
United States and
just two in Britain, authorities say. But
the low numbers
are "not reflective of how seriously we
take these cases,
but more reflective of the fact that these
are very hard
cases to prosecute," said Chris Painter,
the deputy chief of computer crimes at the
U.S. Department of Justice.
So what can you do to protect yourself against
computer viruses?
Well, first and foremost, make sure you
have proven anti-virus protection like like
Symantec's Norton Anti-Virus or McAfee's
ViruScan.
In addition, If you haven't already done
so, I highly recommend installing Microsoft's
Service Pack 2. SP2 tightens your PC's security
with a new Windows Firewall, an improved
Automatic Updates feature, and a pop-up
ad blocker for Internet Explorer. Plus,
the newly minted Security Center gives you
one easy-to-use interface for keeping tabs
on your PC's security apps.
"Male. Obsessed with computers. Lacking
a girlfriend. Aged
14 to 34. Capable of creating chaos worldwide."
Now, I'm no psychiatrist, but to me, the
above description
sounds more like someone with a few "bats
in the belfry!"
About the author:
Dean Phillips is an Internet marketing expert,
writer,
publisher and entrepreneur. Questions? Comments?
Dean can be
reached at mailto: dean@lets-make-money.net
Visit his website at: http://www.lets-make-money.net
Circulated by Bandoni
Media
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