Slashdot Mirror


"Witty" Worm Wrecks Computers

An anonymous reader writes "A new Internet worm wriggled across the entire Internet in the span of a few hours Saturday morning to all computers running several recent versions of firewall software from Internet Security Systems, including BlackICE and RealSecure, according to this story at Washingtonpost.com. The flaw that Witty exploited was discovered Wednesday by eEye Digital Security. The worm overwrites data on the first few sectors of the victim's hard drive, making the machine virtually ubootable and potentially destroying much - if not all - of the victim's data." Update: 03/21 02:18 GMT by T : Reader Jeff Horning points out that eEye actually disovered the worm on the 8th of March, and came up with a fix the next day.

9 of 587 comments (clear)

  1. FP by Anonymous Coward · · Score: -1, Offtopic

    FP by GNAA!!!

  2. Ughhhhh by Otter · · Score: -1, Offtopic
    Meanwhile, I just checked a POP account for the first time in maybe 48 hours. Over 3200 mails, of which maybe 6 are going to be meaningful. The rest is a mix of worms, spam and bounces from worms and the scumbags forging my domain in their spam.

    Yeah, POPFile catches 99% of it and since I've stopped job hunting, I'll just delete everything it catches (screw my friends if it gets their mail by mistake) but that's 3000 mails to get over dialup before I can read my mail. As I keep saying here, something will get done to fix this mess because it absolutely has to. There's no way MS and AOL are going to let this get even worse.

    (Meanwhile, in the 30 seconds I spend typing this, I miss the end of both the Stanford-Alabama and Syracuse-Maryland games! WTF? It's been a rough week for Stanford, between the worm that checks available bandwidth by saturating stanford.edu and now this. Woah, I even stayed on topic!)

  3. Infection by CGP314 · · Score: 1, Offtopic

    "With all these hard drive problems, the infection rates are going to shrink pretty quickly as all these affected machines grind themselves to a halt," Stewart said.

    Well thanks Stewart. I'm glad to know I won't have to worry about the infection rate of AIDS once most people have AIDS.


    -Colin

  4. Re:This is a perfect time to promote the expressio by Anonymous Coward · · Score: -1, Offtopic
    "FGTRGDI" (Fucken Great Twat Randa Get Dick Inya)

    More Perversity to the people!

  5. ISN'T IT IRONIC by Anonymous Coward · · Score: -1, Offtopic

    It's like raaaaaaaaaaaain on your wedding day, or a freeeeeeeee ride when you've already paid. It's like goooooood advice that just didn't take, and who would've thought...it figures.

  6. Re:points for speed and damage by neoThoth · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    Just for fun and giggles, my submission

    Blackice worm released Saturday March 20, @04:25PM Rejected
    Maybe I didn't spice it up enough?

  7. Re:Sucks to be a Windows user by pair-a-noyd · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    "How many times do you Linux lusers have to be told that we don't want to use linux."

    That's ok, we enjoy being GODS among men...

  8. Incorrect on point 4. by khasim · · Score: 1, Offtopic

    1, 2 and 3 are okay. Subject to each person's experience.

    4 is not. Worms and viruses and (to a lesser extent) trojans are NOT distributed equally based upon marketshare.

    They propagate because of FLAWS in the SECURITY of the system. And Linux has a better security model than Windows.

    Windows has the problems it does because:
    #1. Microsoft puts software on the system that was not selected. Microsoft does this for a "user friendly" point. But "user friendly" does not equate to "good security".

    #2. Microsoft enable services, by default, that are NOT needed. Again, this is for "user friendly" points. But it is bad for security.

    #3. Microsoft made it easy to execute apps, even via email. They're finally learning on this one after wave after wave after wave of email trojans have hit their products. Again, this is from a "user friendly" point.

    In order for Linux to have the same problems that Microsoft has, Linux would have to have 51% of the desktop, come installed with the same apps on 90% of those desktops AND have security holes in those apps AND be setup to run as root.

    This is NOT just about who has more desktops.

  9. for the virus experts... by Sivaram_Velauthapill · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    For those that know a bit about viruses...

    Are there viruses that can run on multiple operating systems? I'm talking about ONE virus that can infect a Windows machine, then propagate onto a linux machine and infect that, and so on. I'm also not talking about Internet Explorer exploits, or user exploit/trojan horse (eg. user clicks on some attached file),etc. I'm talking about an old school virus that can detect what OS is running and then infect it.

    Anyone know of such viruses?

    Sivaram Velauthapillai

    --
    Sivaram Velauthapillai
    Seeking the meaning of life... @slashdot of all places ;)