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TechTidBit – Tips and advice for small business computing – Tech Experts™ – Monroe Michigan

TechTidBit - Tips and advice for small business computing - Tech Experts™ - Monroe Michigan

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‘Storm’ Trojan Hits 1.6 Million Computers; General Virus Activity at an All Time High

February 24, 2007

It is mission critical that you keep your antivirus subscription current and your software up to date. Many small business owners think that because they purchased the software one time, they’re protected.

Most anti-virus software requires an annual subscription. And, if you don’t renew, you’re not protected. Too many business owners are finding this out the hard way.

For example, the Trojan horse that began spreading during the last week of January has attacked at least 1.6 million PCs, with no signs of stopping. In addition, Windows Vista is also vulnerable to the attack.

Originally dubbed the “Storm worm” because one of the subject heads used by its e-mail touted Europe’s recent severe weather, the Trojan’s author is now spreading it using subjects such as “Love birds” and “Touched by Love.”

The Trojan, meanwhile, piggybacks on the spam as an executable file with names ranging from “postcard.exe” to “Flash Postcard.exe.”

If your computer’s anti-virus software is out of date, or if you’ve not renewed your anti-virus subscription, your system could easily get infected by a seemingly innocent e-mail.

By Symantec’s estimate, the Storm Worm is the most serious Internet threat in 20 months.

As with most large-scale Trojan attacks, the goal seems to be to acquire a large botnet, or collection of compromised PCs, that can be used to send traditional scam spams or for later identity mining.

Windows 2000 and Windows XP are vulnerable to all of the Storm Worm variations, but Windows Server 2003 is not; the Trojan’s creator specifically excluded that edition of Windows from the code. We presume the malware writers didn’t have time to test it on this operating system.

New computer viruses are discovered on a daily basis. In order to remain effective, your antivirus software needs to be regularly updated, generally once a week.

Make sure you know how to check your antivirus software for updates, and spot check automatic updates to make sure they are, in fact, updating.

If your version of anti-virus software doesn’t automatically update (many free or low cost programs do not), schedule reminders on your computer so updates are performed regularly.

Filed Under: Viruses Tagged With: Antivirus, Storm Worm Botnet, Viruses

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