
Because your PC can't tell the time...
Published: 1 December 2003 09:00 GMT
Sobig.F is still rampaging around the internet, two months after the virus was supposed to have terminated itself.
Email security firm MessageLabs said Sobig.F was the third most active virus in November, with some 264,000 copies being detected by its email virus-scanning servers.
Although this activity is well below the virus's peak, it is still surprising as Sobig.F - like several other members of the Sobig family - contained a built-in shutdown date that was supposed to prevent it propagating after 10 September. According to MessageLabs, Sobig.F's continued proliferation is due to a combination of factors, including the successful efforts that prevented it wreaking even more havoc and the fact that many PCs are set to the wrong date.
The first Sobig virus appeared in January 2003, and was followed by many variants. Sobig.F was first detected on 19 August. It propagated by email, and caused massive disruption to corporate networks, but its real purpose was to take over computers.
Once infected by Sobig.F, a PC would periodically link to 20 web servers that had been individually hacked by the virus author, and try to download a file. Some experts believe this downloaded code could have precipitated a massive denial-of-service attack, but this was foiled because the compromised servers were taken offline in time.
MessageLabs believes that this may have prevented some copies of Sobig.F from terminating themselves. "The plug was pulled on the target servers before the PCs that were infected by Sobig.F could download the final bit of code," said Paul Wood, principal information security analyst at MessageLabs. "Once that file had been downloaded and the PC was at the final stage, they would have stopped propagating more copies of Sobig.F to avoid anyone spotting the fact that they'd already been compromised." Instead, Wood believes, PCs infected with Sobig.F are still spreading the virus and aren't checking the date.
Because of the built-in shutoff mechanism, a PC receiving a copy of Sobig.F today should not try to forward it on. But another factor behind Sobig.F's longevity could be that some PCs are set to the incorrect date. While networked PCs will typically take their date and time from a central server, home PCs are reliant on their internal clock and the small battery that powers it.
If the battery runs down and isn't replaced, a computer will not know the correct date or time. According to MessageLabs, many such PCs are out there, connected to the web, being infected with Sobig.F by computers that were compromised back in August and haven't switched their virus activity off. It is these PCs that are pumping out more copies.
Graeme Wearden writes for ZDNet UK
Ensure that all email messages are scanned for viruses as soon as they enter the infrastructure (inbound and outbound) and operate a quarantine of ...
The role will be responsible for reviewing table play, player behaviour andaccount information for spurious activity. Maintain procedure and process ...
Your main duties will be to proactively opportunities to improve the customer experience, prioritising and managing improvement activity. Monitor and ...
Agenda Setters 2008
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
Naked CIO Naked CIO: Should you monitor staff? Somebody's watching you
Elinor Mills Why 1970s hackers had 'whiz kid' status Q&A: Kevin Mitnick - blackhat hacker turned good guy