By
Joris Evers
Tuesday, January 24 2006 09:29 AM
URL:
http://www.zdnetasia.com/news/security/0,39044215,39307201,00.htm
A new e-mail worm that spreads under the guise of pornographic content has
jumped to the top of the worldwide virus charts.
When run on a Windows PC, the worm copies itself to shared network locations
and sends itself to e-mail addresses found on the target computer. The pest
includes a timed attack that attempts to disable antivirus and firewall software
and delete certain files, including Office documents, on the third day of the
month, according to antivirus software vendor F-Secure.
The worm, dubbed W32/Nyxem-E by F-Secure, arrives attached to an e-mail
message. It uses a variety of subject lines, including "School girl fantasies
gone bad." The body text also varies, but it can include references to the Kama
Sutra, the ancient Sanskrit book with pictures and explanations about different sexual positions.
"This worm feeds on people's willingness to receive salacious content on
their desktop computer," Graham Cluley, senior technology consultant for
antivirus vendor Sophos, said in a statement.
Nyxem-E was the most commonly caught threat in the past 24 hours, according to
both F-Secure and Trend Micro, which calls the worm Grew.A. The worm also has its own counting mechanism, and it
showed 510,000 infected systems on Saturday, according to F-Secure.
"Our internal reporting system shows a steady stream of Nyxems being reported
from all over the world, from USA to Australia," F-Secure said in a statement on
its corporate blog. "If the worm keeps this pace, Friday the 3rd of February
might be nasty--that's when the destructive payload is programmed to strike for the first time."
To protect themselves, users should keep their antivirus software up to date
and be wary when opening e-mail attachments, experts said.