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'Some viruses are welcome', says anti-gypsy lobby

Romanian anti-gypsy music virus should have been let go say some...

Tags: gypsy, virus, bitdefender

By Munir Kotadia

Published: 13 June 2005 10:50 BST

Romanian security firm BitDefender has revealed that after releasing signatures to protect its customers from a virus that deleted files from their computers containing gypsy music, it was inundated with letters of complaint from customers who wanted the virus to spread.

The virus, dubbed Antiman.A, was discovered at the end of April and duped users into executing its payload by pretending to contain news about three Romanian journalists that had been kidnapped. When run, the virus searched the victim's computer for files containing the names of Romanian gypsy music singers.

At the time, BitDefender's chief technology officer Bogdan Dumitru said the virus writer was obviously a Romanian citizen that had "deep discontent" with gypsy music in Romania.

A Bitdefender spokesperson told ZDNet Australia that it released signature files to protect customers within hours of discovering the virus but instead of praise, the company started receiving emails from users who thought the virus was 'socially useful' and should be allowed to thrive.

One customer, whose details have been withheld, said: "I appreciate your rapid reaction when new viruses are released... Nevertheless, when socially useful viruses are released, I think you could wait at least one day... This is not a virus, this is a utilitarian tool."

The message concluded: "If you know the author of this virus, please give him my email address; I'm ready to offer him food and drinks for at least two weeks".

Another customer was also hoping detection signatures were delayed but he went on to wish for a variant that could attack legacy systems: "Couldn't you guys wait two or three more days, until my whole neighbourhood was infected? Is there a version of this virus that can erase the cassettes played in cars that are stopped in traffic?"

The last word goes to a BitDefender customer who offered to keep the antivirus lab staff busy to try to give the virus more time to spread: "I would have gotten all of you drunk just to make sure you didn't get the [detection] tool out... god bless the guy who created this virus."

Munir Kotadia writes for ZDNet Australia

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