By
Joris Evers
Tuesday, August 16 2005 09:32 AM
URL:
http://www.zdnetasia.com/news/security/0,39044215,39249022,00.htm
A new worm that was unleashed over the weekend affects only a limited
group of Windows users and has not wreaked any widespread havoc, according to
Trend Micro.
As of Monday on the West Coast, the original Zotob.A had infected
about 50 computers worldwide, and the first variant, Zotob.B, had compromised
about 1,000 systems, the antivirus software maker said.
"There are not that many infections," said David Perry, director of global education at Trend Micro.
The worm, which has spawned at least two variants, exploits a hole in the
plug-and-play feature in the Windows operating system. It surfaced only days
after Microsoft offered a fix for the "critical" bug as part of its monthly patching
cycle.
While early reports on Zotob suggested it was spreading rapidly, the impact
of the worm has actually been restricted because it targets PCs running Windows
2000, an older version of the software, Microsoft said. It poses no threat to
computers running the newer Windows XP and Windows Server 2003, the company
added.
"Only a small number of customers have actually been affected," said Stephen
Toulouse, a program manager in Microsoft's security group. "It is not something
that has any type of widespread impact on the Internet...It hits Windows 2000
customers very specifically."
Zotob appeared in record time after Microsoft's patch release, according to
Trend Micro. "This is the fastest turnaround from the announcement of the
vulnerability to an actual virus," Perry said.
Last Tuesday, Microsoft issued
patches to fix the plug-and-play vulnerability in various versions of
Windows. The bulletins included fixes for the newer Windows XP and Windows
Server 2003, even though the software maker already said at the time that only
PCs running Windows 2000 were susceptible to a remote attack via the
vulnerability.
There are desktop and server versions of Windows 2000, which was released in
2000 for business users rather than consumers. More recent editions of Windows
are available, but Windows 2000 remains popular. The operating system ran on 48
percent of business PCs during the first quarter of 2005, according to a recent study
by AssetMetrix.
Users of Windows 2000 should be on guard, especially if they are not using a
firewall, said Mikko Hypponen, director of antivirus research at software maker
F-Secure. Zotob.A and Zotob.B scan the Internet for vulnerable systems using TCP
port 445, a port typically blocked by a firewall, he said.
When a target system is found by Zotob, it installs a shell program on the
computer that downloads the actual worm code, named Haha.exe, using FTP (File
Transfer Protocol). The newly infected system then starts searching for new
computers to compromise.
A second offshoot, Zotob.C, adds a mass-mailing capability, which means it
can also spread by e-mail.
The worm itself doesn't have a destructive payload, but the first two
versions do let the attacker commandeer the infected machine. "It leaves an open
back door. It could download anything," Perry said.