
Hackers send message to the antivirus company...
By Dan Ilett
Published: 18 July 2005 16:26 GMT
An email worm is recruiting computers for a coordinated attack on antivirus vendor Symantec's website.
Since Friday, email filtering vendor MessageLabs has intercepted 13,717 copies of the worm, dubbed Breatel.A-mm, and has issued a medium-level warning.
The worm travels as an email attachment, under the subject lines: "Message could not be delivered", "Error", or "Mail Delivery System".
If the attached file is opened, the computer connects to a botnet — a network of thousands of hacker-controlled computers used for illegal activity – and begins to send data to the Symantec website in the hope of crashing it.
According to antivirus company F-Secure, the worm attachment contains a message to Symantec that says: "easy to talk but hard to work :) what about working in symantec? :P it is not only a mass mail worm it is also a lsass worm :)"
A Symantec spokesman said that the company's infrastructure was built to withstand such attacks.
The first copy of the worm was sent from Northern Ireland, MessageLabs said.
CompanyMcAfee creates best-of-breed computer security solutions that span large enterprises, governments, small- & medium-sized businesses, & ...
You will also provide support and information for realtime planning as well as support and information for the billing process.Principle ...
An Symantec Security Consultant is required to work for an initial 3 month contract for a market leading consultancy based in Rotherham, South ...
Agenda Setters 2009
Welcome to the ninth annual Agenda Setters poll – silicon.com's list of the top 50 most influential individuals in the technology and IT industries, from techies and CIOs to entrepreneurs and business leaders. Find out more in our latest special report.
Stories from the web...
Copyright © 2008 CBS Interactive Limited. All rights reserved. Top of page
Clive Longbottom Windows 7: Not perfect - but ready for prime time Microsoft's latest OS fixes most of Vista's ills - but still has challenges ahead
Stephen Kleynhans Mind the details with Windows 7 Just because it might work better than Vista, it doesn't mean you can be sloppy