First worm of New Year strikes

02 Jan 2007

Be the first to comment

A Computing logo
Picture of a virus

An email worm disguised as a New Year's greeting is spreading rapidly across the internet.

The worm-laden messages are titled 'Happy New Year' and contain an attachment called either postcard.exe, or postcard.zip, according to experts at VeriSign's iDefense Labs.

'The period of greatest risk is through New Year's Day, when antivirus protection is the lowest for this new threat and users are most apt to click on a holiday-related message,' said Ken Dunham, director of the Rapid Response Team at iDefense Labs.

'Everyone should be on guard for e-mails and other content potentially harboring malicious code during the holiday period,' he said.

If the attachment is opened, malicious software is downloaded from the Internet and can infect computers running Windows operating systems.

Once a computer is infected, the worm begins spamming mail to infect other computers. The worm is already moving quickly across the Internet, at a rate of five emails per second on at least one large network, according to the iDefense Labs Web site.

Security experts say that although the virus looks similar to the Warezov Trojan horse that has plagued the Internet for the past month, it is actually a new variant of the worm. More than 160 email servers are used by the worm to send out spam to potential victims, Dunham said.

High volumes of mass emails are usually sent around the holidays. The spike in holiday spam is largely attributed to the fact that people have been more likely to open the messages.

What do you think? Email us at feedback@computing.co.uk

Further Reading:

Malware enters new phase

Vista vulnerable to malware

Worm authors receive prison se n tences

Reader comments

Have your say on this article

All fields required. Your email address will not be displayed on the site.

By submitting a comment you agree to abide by our Terms & Conditions

  • Digg
  • Tweet

Newsletters

Sign up for our FREE newsletters

Technology Patent Wars

Large companies such as Microsoft, Facebook and Google have been hoovering up technology patents recently. Is this stifling innovation?

88 %

5 %

7 %