Storm Worm Virus
The latest virus
on our list is the dreaded Storm Worm. It was late 2006 when computer
security experts first identified the worm. The public began to call the
virus the Storm Worm because one of the e-mail
messages carrying the virus had as its subject "230 dead as storm
batters Europe." Antivirus companies call the worm other names. For
example, Symantec calls it Peacomm while McAfee refers to it as Nuwar.
This might sound confusing, but there's already a 2001 virus called the
W32.Storm.Worm. The 2001 virus and the 2006 worm are completely
different programs.
The Storm Worm is a Trojan horse program. Its
payload is another program, though not always the same one. Some
versions of the Storm Worm turn computers into zombies or bots.
As computers become infected, they become vulnerable to remote control
by the person behind the attack. Some hackers use the Storm Worm to
create a botnet and use it to send spam mail across the Internet.
Many
versions of the Storm Worm fool the victim into downloading the
application through fake links to news stories or videos. The people
behind the attacks will often change the subject of the e-mail to
reflect current events. For example, just before the 2008 Olympics in
Beijing, a new version of the worm appeared in e-mails with subjects
like "a new deadly catastrophe in China" or "China's most deadly earthquake."
The e-mail claimed to link to video and news stories related to the
subject, but in reality clicking on the link activated a download of the
worm to the victim's computer [source: McAfee].
Several news agencies and blogs
named the Storm Worm one of the worst virus attacks in years. By July
2007, an official with the security company Postini claimed that the
firm detected more than 200 million e-mails carrying links to the Storm
Worm during an attack that spanned several days [source: Gaudin]. Fortunately, not every e-mail led to someone downloading the worm.
Although
the Storm Worm is widespread, it's not the most difficult virus to
detect or remove from a computer system. If you keep your antivirus
software up to date and remember to use caution when you receive e-mails
from unfamiliar people or see strange links, you'll save yourself some
major headaches.
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