Bay Geeks Computer Repair Services

June 1, 2009

WARNING: Juste Best Videos Attack Jumps from Twitter to Facebook

Filed under: Malware, viruses — admin @ 1:02 pm
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Juste (dot) ru, the video scam that’s been spreading rapidly on Twitter, is actually a double-headed beast.

We’re now getting reports of the same video links being spammed through user accounts on Facebook, too - a screenshot of such a mail is below. If you get a Facebook message with a link to Juste.ru, DO NOT click the link or visit the site - it appears to steal your credentials for both Twitter and Facebook, then abuse them to spread the scam further. Your Facebook friends get spam messages, and your Twitter followers get sent malicious Tweets.

This is perhaps the most vicious of social networking scams we’ve seen, affecting two networks simultaneously. Given that it’s able to grab logins from both sites, we’re assuming that it works by installing malware on the host machine, rather than simply asking for login details. We’ll continue to update once we have more information.

Current advisory: do not click links to “juste (dot) ru” on either Twitter or Facebook today. Also avoid any links on Facebook that simply say “Video” or “Best Video” - I’ve seen at least one example where it seems the link is hidden behind a short URL.

If you think you might be affected (ie. your Twitter or Facebook accounts are sending out spam links), run a full virus and spyware scan, clear your browser cookies and change your passwords on both services.

Source

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April 24, 2009

Conficker Virus Starts to Attack PCs

Filed under: viruses — Alden @ 11:37 pm
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A malicious software program known as Conficker that many feared would wreak havoc on April 1 is slowly being activated, weeks after being dismissed as a false alarm, security experts said.

Click to continue reading “Conficker Virus Starts to Attack PCs”

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April 10, 2009

Conficker Update: Creating Spam-Spewing Drones?

Filed under: Antivirus, Malware, Security, spam, viruses — admin @ 8:06 pm
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More than a week after its April 1 deadline, the Conficker C worm released an update that could activate the botnet to deliver spam and turn infected PCs into zombies.
Researchers say that the latest update could include a connection between the Conficker worm to the active spam bot W32.Waledac. Specifically, researchers said they have seen circumstantial evidence that the latest strain of Conficker, known as Downadup E, might drop a Waledac binary on machines infected with Conficker C. That binary is designed to steal information and turn infected PCs into spam-spewing drones under the control of the malware authors, experts say.

“We got a first look at the payload and we’re still looking at this one, a worm or Trojan called Waledac associated with tons of spam,” said Vincent Weafer, vice president of Symantec (NSDQ:SYMC) Security Response. “Ultimately it’s about information stealing.”

More Conficker updates could include widespread distribution of Trojans, keystroke loggers and other malware designed to grab user credentials and steal personal and financial information later down the road, Weafer said. “And then what’s left is a very robust botnet,” he added.

April 1 marked the day the Conficker worm was scheduled to undergo an update that provided a new domain generation algorithm allowing the infected computers to “call home” to about 500 of the 50,000 newly generated domains, possibly for new instructions.

The new strain of the Conficker worm updates machines infected with Conficker C to the new strain, known as Downadup E via peer-to-peer techniques.

Researchers said that they’ve seen a few differentiators from the previous Conficker C.

The updated Conficker prefers to travel through peer-to-peer networks to distribute its new version E. However, researchers say that the new sample doesn’t appear to include new infection vectors that might allow it to propagate faster or onto new machines.

The latest version also incorporates a previously unseen self-removal functionality that is programmed with the ability to eliminate itself from infected hosts on May 3, and reaches out to a new list of high-profile domains.

Before its update April 1, Conficker C was renowned for exhibiting an array of sophisticated self-preservation techniques, which included blocking access to security vendor sites, dodging numerous antivirus products, and disabling Windows automatic updates. In addition, Conficker C has the ability to patch its own vulnerability once it has infected a machine, presumably to prevent competing malware from attacking the same host.

The earliest Conficker variants, Conficker B, and its predecessor Conficker A, had unique abilities to replicate and spread rapidly, infecting millions of PCs with techniques that ranged from brute force password guessing to transmission through USB sticks and peer-to-peer networks. Experts say that the highest rates of infections were found primarily in Latin America and other markets that rely on pirated Windows software, which doesn’t receive security updates.

Meanwhile, the entire upgrade is anticipated to take weeks to months, Weafer said.

“We describe this as step five of a 1,000-step chess match. This is going to go on for a while,” Weafer said. “This is not going to be an overnight upgrade.”

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February 16, 2009

Project Snowblind Worm

Filed under: viruses — Alden @ 10:22 am
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Sophos has posted an article on their blog about a game installer that also includes a worm.

The game is titled Project: Snowblind. It is a multi-player first-person shooter from Eidos. The worm that comes with the installer is vghhost.exe. It is a network worm and also an IRC backdoor Trojan.

It can perform screen captures and log information among other processes. The author of the of the article notes that users should download legitimate freeware games from reputable sites or from the game publisher’s website.

Source: Sophos

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February 14, 2009

Kaspersky denies leaks after SQL hack

Filed under: Antivirus, Malware, Security, viruses — admin @ 7:15 pm
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Russian antivirus vendor Kaspersky Labs’s US website was hacked over the weekend, exposing the company’s customer database, but Kaspersky has denied data was compromised and says the vulnerability wasn’t critical.

 

An unidentified hacker reported over the weekend that he was able to access a complete profile of the company’s databases, revealing its clients’ names, activation codes, list of bugs the company tracks and client email addresses.

 

The hacker claimed to have hacked Kaspersky Labs’s databases using an SQL injection attack, which exploits a vulnerability in an application’s database layer.

 

The method has become a popular means to gain information via web-facing applications or as a way to use popular websites to spread malicious software.

 

Microsoft’s UK website came under a similar attack in 2007 when hackers used an SQL injection to inject HTML code which seemingly defaced its web pages.

 

The Kaspersky hacker, who published their finding on the Hackersblog.org website, has since said that confidential data would not be released.

 

“[The] Kaspersky team doesn’t need to worry about us spreading their confidential stuff. Our staff will never save or keep any confidential data. We just point our fingers to big websites with security problems,” they reported.

 

Kaspersky Labs has admitted that a subsection of its usa.kaspersky.com domain was vulnerable last Saturday when a hacker “attempted an attack on the site”.

 

“The site was only vulnerable for a very brief period, and upon detection of the vulnerability we immediately took action to roll back the subsection of the site and the vulnerability was eliminated within 30 minutes of detection. The vulnerability wasn’t critical and no data was compromised from the site,” a spokesperson for the company said in a statement.

 

This article was originally posted on ZDNet Australia.

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Microsoft slaps US$250,000-00 bounty on Conficker worm

Filed under: Malware, Security, viruses — admin @ 12:46 pm
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Microsoft announced it has formed a technology industry posse and put a bounty of $US250,000 on the heads of those responsible for a vexing computer worm.

The nasty computer code known as “Conficker” or “Downadup” has been spreading quickly, wriggling into millions of computers worldwide and threatening to commandeer or crash systems.

Microsoft is working with computer security specialists and the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN) to track down whoever unleashed Conficker.

“The best way to defeat potential botnets like Conficker/Downadup is by the security and domain name system communities working together,” said ICANN chief Internet security advisor Greg Rattray.

Microsoft promised to pay 250,000 dollars for information that leads to the capture and conviction of the people that launched the malicious code on the Internet.

“We hope these efforts help to contain the threat posed by Conficker, as well as hold those who illegally launch malware accountable,” said George Stathakopoulos, general manager of Microsoft’s Trustworthy Computing Group.

 Source

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January 20, 2009

Simple, Proper Avira Anti-Virus Configuration

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As computer consultants, we at Bay Geeks are constantly answering this question: “Which Anti-virus program do you recommend?”

Our answers change based on a variety of factors including our experience, technical articles and feedback from our clients.

We’re always on the look out for high quality, low cost solutions we can offer our clients. One of the latest up and comers has been Avira. We’ve seen this product more and more over the last year and some of the recent research results we’ve reviewed has brought this product into our favor, (assuming you don’t mind two pop-ups per day {for the free version}… once when it updates and once when it scans).

According to www.av-comparatives.org Avira has been beating out the best Anti-virus products, by albeit a small margin… but they’re winning none the less.

For an in depth look at the research, installation and configuration details… please check out this Avira Anti-Virus Research, Installation and Configuration Tutorial (2.64 MB).

We hope this helps!

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December 29, 2008

Santa left a virus under the Christmas tree

Filed under: Malware, viruses — Tags: , , — admin @ 9:14 am
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Amazon has warned its customers that one of Samsung’s digital picture frames shipped to customers infected with a virus. While Samsung has some egg on its face, malware that ships on consumer hardware is not as serious of an issue as it may seem.

Earlier this week Amazon alerted its customers to an issue affecting the installation CD that shipped with the Samsung SPF-85H 8 inch Digital Picture Frame. Apparently the CD shipped with a copy of the W32.Sality.AE virus. Amazon is recommending that people download a recent copy of the application directly from Samsung’s website rather than using the CD.

So yes, this is embarrassing for Samsung. It shows that either they or the subcontractor who cut the CD need to tighten up their processes surrounding manufacturing systems. There is no reason for those machines to be exposed to malware, let alone not run up-to-date anti-virus to catch these infections.

The customers have a pretty low likelihood of being infected by this malware, though. Any system running up-to-date anti-virus would have been guaranteed to spot the potential infection, as the delay between when the CD was first cut and when the customer attempted to install the application was far longer than the average amount of time it takes for a piece of malware to be detected by an anti-virus package. If the system wasn’t running an up-to-date anti-virus package, well, it probably had oodles of malware already, and the marginal cost of one more infection is pretty small.

I suspect next year Samsung will be asking Santa for security people who are tightwads about compliance.

Adam J. O’Donnell, Ph.D. is an R&D engineer who has focused on computer security since 2000. He currently is the Director of Emerging Technologies at Cloudmark, a messaging security company located in San Francisco. See his full profile and disclosure of his industry affiliations.
By Adam J. O’Donnel, Ph.D.

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The Facebook virus spreads: No social network is safe

Filed under: Malware, viruses — Tags: — admin @ 9:10 am
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“KOOBFACE” is the name of the Trojan worm that’s been making its way through the social networking site Facebook lately, but to the site’s users, it’s been simply known as “the Facebook virus.” That name will soon become a misnomer, though, because the worm is now spreading outside of Facebook’s walls to attack other social networks like Bebo, MySpace and Friendster.

About Koobface
Once a computer has become infected with the Kooface worm, it spams the friends belonging to the owner of the computer by leaving comments on their profiles. Those comments appear to come from the infected user, saying things like “Are you sure this is your first acting experience?”, “is it u there?”, “impressive. i’m sure it’s you on this video”, “How can anyone get so busted by a spy camera?” and “You’re the whole show! i’m admired with you.” Save for that last one, whose bad English will likely raise a flag that all is not what it seems, the other comments appeal to people’s vanity. They wonder: is that really a video of me? and then click through on the link provided.
The link actually takes them to an off-site page which pretends to offer a video download from “YuoTube,” but then stalls saying that you’ll need a new version of Adobe’s Flash Player installed in order to continue. Of course, if you click the button to proceed with the install, you’re infected. Infected users are then directed to even more contaminated web sites when they try to use search engines, which puts them at risk of identity theft, among other things. “Search terms are directed to find-www.net,” said McAfee’s Craig Schmugar, and that “enables ad hijacking and click fraud.”

Social networks will be the new breeding ground for viruses
Koobface may not be the first bit of malware to hit the social networks, but it has become so widespread that it now accounts for one percent of ScanSafe’s blocked malware, said ScanSafe senior security researcher Mary Landesman. (Facebook will not disclose how many members are infected.)
What’s frightening about the spread of this Trojan is not the worm itself - it’s really nothing new in terms of malware - but the way its being spread. Over the years people have learned to be suspicious of unknown links and attachments in their emails, so the virus writers turned to hit us where we’re more vulnerable: on our social networks. Here, many people still have a feeling of comfort and security. They don’t always have their guard up.
According to Graham Cluley, senior technology consultant at Sophos, “a key factor which helps social-networking spam and malware succeed is that people are more prepared to click on a link or message if they believe it is from someone they know. The average person is used to receiving unsolicited e-mails in their regular inbox, but believe messages have more credence when they arrive via Facebook. The message is clear — people need to beware.”
Cluley also warns that the situation is going to get worse next year. There will be more attacks and they will become more sophisticated. “It will probably take a long time before the general public begins to learn that hackers and scammers are using the system for their own ends.”

How To Protect Yourself From Koobface
Besides doing the obvious - running an up-to-date antivirus, security patches, and firewalls - you should be on the look out for the following:

u A sample spam message:

u The malicious site:

u The warning message:

You should also keep an eye on Facebook’s security page (http://www.facebook.com/security) which warns of the latest threats. – New York Times

By Sarah Perez
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