Google
 
Web Expat-Village.com

Last Updated: May 9th, 2006 - 19:19:21  

Main News 
 
 Expats in Venezuela
  Contact Us
  Iain Williams - 'Your Humble Social Dictator' in Caracas
 
 News Section
  Venezuela News
  Expat News
  World News
  USA News
  UK News
  Business, Economic and Financial News
  Caribbean & Latin News
  Sports News
  Top Sport News
  Formula 1
  Motoring News
  Archive News - Back in time
 
 What's On Rinconeers?
 
 What's On? - Caracas Activities and Social Events
  Caracas Hash House Harriers
  Rincon Gang Activities
 
 Features
  Caracas Cinema Listings
  Caracas Weather Forecast
  Horoscope for this week
  Joke of the day
  Entertainment News
  Recipe Of The Day
  Curry Dishes
  Oriental Dishes
  Salads
  Soups
  Venezuela / Caracas Security Alerts and Scams
  Venezuela and Caribbean Travel
 
 Caracas Venezuela Links
  British Embassy Caracas
  Caracas Clubs
  British and International Group
  Dentist Recommendation
  British Embassy Caracas - Alert Notices
  Venzuelan International Schools
 
  Rincon Computer Tips
  General
  e-Mail
  Security
  Windows
 
 Rincon Classified Ads
 
 Rincon Cyber Art Gallery

Rincon Computer Tips


Michael Jackson Suicide E-Mail Hoax Hides Trojan Horse

 

A report from http://www.technewsworld.com

Michael Jackson Suicide E-Mail Hoax Contains Trojan Horse

A spam campaign that claims that Michael Jackson has attempted suicide is seeking to infect e-mail users with a Trojan horse, SophosLabs said yesterday.

The message text claims, "Last night, while in his Neverland Ranch, Michael Jackson has made a suicidal attempt." When users click on the link they are taken to a Web site which secretly installs malicious code onto their PCs.

Sophos said it has identified hundreds of the spam messages being sent, preying on intense media interest in the trial of the controversial pop star.

"If you click on the link, the Web site displays a message saying it is too busy, which may not surprise people who think it might contain genuine breaking news about Michael Jackson," said Sophos security consultant Carole Theriault. "However, this is a diversionary tactic because behind the scenes, the Web site is downloading malware onto the user's computer without their knowledge."

Playing on Social Interests

Sophos experts have analyzed the downloadable code by clicking on the link, and determined that it then attempts to download another Trojan horse which Sophos detects as Troj/Borobt-Gen.

Ken Dunham, the director of malicious code research at iDefense , a Reston, Va.-based threat intelligence firm, told TechNewsWorld that this is another example of social engineering-based attacks. This strategy plays on the recipient's interest around religion, politics, pornography, sports or some other popular current topic.

"This is a downloader Trojan horse event. That is a technique that we've seen increasingly utilized in the past year. These e-mails are sent out containing a very small code. It is easy to package it so it's initially undetected by anti-virus companies," Dunham said. "That in turn starts a downloader event which installs more malware, which may then install even more code as well."

Tapping Star Power

Sophos notes that this is not the first time that virus writers and hackers have exploited the troubled pop star in attempts to spread their malware. Last October messages were posted on the Internet claiming that incriminating home videos belonging to Jackson had been discovered. But clicking on the link infected Web surfers with the Hackarmy Trojan horse.

"The sick minds behind viruses and other malware often exploit celebrity names and news stories in an attempt to infect as many people as possible," Theriault said. "All computer users should be very careful about clicking on Weblinks in unsolicited e-mail or launching unknown attachments."

Protecting the Network

Experts recommend companies automatically update their corporate virus protection, and filter attachments which may contain malicious code at the e-mail gateway with a consolidated solution to defend against viruses and spam.

"Network administrators should be looking for questionable outbound traffic," Dunham said. "They should have firewalls in place to either block or at least monitor this outbound traffic to identify if there are any suspicious requests being made on certain ports or certain known hostile URL addresses.


© Copyright 2003 by Expat-Village.com
[an error occurred while processing this directive]
Top of Page


Hosted & Managed by: