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New, Stealthy Conficker B++ Worm Discovered

nandemoari writes "A new variant of the Conficker/Downadup worm has been detected. The worm opens a backdoor on an infected machine and allows hackers remote control of infected PCs. Dubbed Conficker B++ (and not to be confused with Conficker B), the new variant of the worm opens a backdoor with auto-update functionality, allowing a hacker to distribute malware to infected machines. It's difficult to know exactly how long Conficker B++ has been circulating, but researchers first noticed it on February 6 of this year." If this seems familiar to you, it probably is.

2 of 87 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Old news? by AlterRNow · · Score: 3, Insightful

    News for nerds, stuff that matter[ed yesterday]!

    On another note, if the editor knew of the previous story.. why was it posted? I must admit, I'm not very knowledgeable on the editorial process of ./

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    The disappearing pencil trick. Let me show you it.
  2. Re:profit motive by Lord+Ender · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Botnets can be profitable, however, someone skilled enough to write the malware necessary for botnet creation could likely be making better money in the private sector with a real job and no jail risk (in the US, at least). Most of the stuff I see comes from Eastern Europe or Asia, where law enforcement is unlikely to prosecute and there aren't decent Software industries hiring people with programming talent.

    So they make money by

    • sending spam
    • click-fraud (scamming web advertisers)
    • stealing CC numbers
    • DDoS extortion (yes, european banks have paid botnet owners' extortion demands to avoid getting DoSd.)
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