Ian Gillis
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- Nova Scotia's beautiful south shore
Hi Gang
Please be on the lookout for an email message with the subject:
"230 dead as storm batters Europe."
The email installs a program that will allow others to use your computer in a botnet. Don't worry about the details - it's just bad news.
Text of the full Reuters article:
Storm Worm hits computers around the world
2 hours, 21 minutes ago
Computer virus writers attacked thousands of computers on Friday using an unusually topical email citing raging European storms, a security company said.
The virus, which the company named "Storm Worm," was emailed to hundreds of thousands of addresses globally with the subject line "230 dead as storm batters Europe."
An attached file contained so-called malware that can infiltrate computer systems.
"What makes this exceptional is the timely nature of the attack," Mikko Hypponen, head of research at Finnish data security firm F-Secure, told Reuters.
. Hypponen said thousands of computers, most in private use, had been affected.
He said most users would not notice the malware, or trojan, which creates a back door to the computer that can be exploited later to steal data or to use the computer to post spam.
Please be on the lookout for an email message with the subject:
"230 dead as storm batters Europe."
The email installs a program that will allow others to use your computer in a botnet. Don't worry about the details - it's just bad news.
Text of the full Reuters article:
Storm Worm hits computers around the world
2 hours, 21 minutes ago
Computer virus writers attacked thousands of computers on Friday using an unusually topical email citing raging European storms, a security company said.
The virus, which the company named "Storm Worm," was emailed to hundreds of thousands of addresses globally with the subject line "230 dead as storm batters Europe."
An attached file contained so-called malware that can infiltrate computer systems.
"What makes this exceptional is the timely nature of the attack," Mikko Hypponen, head of research at Finnish data security firm F-Secure, told Reuters.
. Hypponen said thousands of computers, most in private use, had been affected.
He said most users would not notice the malware, or trojan, which creates a back door to the computer that can be exploited later to steal data or to use the computer to post spam.