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Asus Ships Eee PCs With Malware

An anonymous reader writes "'According to an email sent out by Asus, PC Advisor reports, the Eee Box's 80GB hard drive has the recycled.exe virus files hidden in the drive's D: partition. When the drive is opened, the virus activates and attempts to infect the C: drive and any removable drives connected to the system.'"

3 of 124 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Close, but no cigar by Alex+Belits · · Score: 4, Insightful

    A prompt will only decrease the percent of people that fall victim. IMO, if an inserted media has files flagged to autorun, a prompt should only appear if a user has already installed a program to handle that format. In this sense, a DVD can have a 'play DVD' prompt *IF* the user has approved that behavior and *IF* the program executed is already installed.

    DVD (or anything that "has already installed a program") does not "run", it contains no executable code, only data and minimal scripts that are interpreted (or ignored) by the player.

    The idea to ACTUALLY RUN EXECUTABLE CODE JUST BECAUSE IT APPEARED ON SOME MEDIA is far, far more stupid than any automated playback. When player is automatically started, it might create a security hole because player may be buggy. Running executables is a security hole all in itself. There should be no questions, no dialog boxes, no anything that will even suggest that the user might want to run those things until the user runs the executable or installs it as a handler for something.

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  2. Re:Too bad they didn't stick with only Linux by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    What I really don't understand is why, for a project which started out Linux-only, it contains so much hardware with mediocre-to-poor Linux support

    Because the use of Linux was accidental, not the objective. The target was to make it inexpensive.

  3. Re:Please clarify how it is remarkably stupid by Bert64 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    A DVD player is a single purpose device, it reads data from the drive and may execute some sandboxed scripting, unless there are security holes in the player program it's unlikely to be an issue, and since dvd players are typically standalone its unlikely to be a problem.

    A games console is also a single purpose device, it's purpose is for providing entertainment...

    A fully fledged computer is not a single purpose device, whereas some are used like games consoles solely for entertainment, some people actually try to get important work done on them and deal with confidential data using them. If something is a toy then fair enough, but for a critical tool that could hold the keys to your business and finances there is no way it should do something so stupid as to execute unknown binaries as soon as media is inserted.

    The sooner people separate their devices, and stop trying to conduct business or deal with their finances on the same machine they use as a general toy the better.

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