Beware Kournikova virus

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1957 - 2008<br>Elite Moderator Emeritus<br>Troll H
Oct 9, 1999
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No kidding, see
here


NEW YORK (AP) -- A computer virus purported to be an electronic photo of Anna Kournikova overwhelmed e-mail servers throughout Europe and North America on Monday.

The virus slowed down e-mail systems and forced some companies to shut down their e-mail altogether while they cleaned out the rogue program. Security experts said the virus does not permanently damage computers.

Within a few hours, the virus had managed to spread almost as rapidly as last May's &quot;I Love You&quot; virus, which caused tens of millions of dollars in damage worldwide. More computers could be infected on Tuesday in Asia.

&quot;Everybody and their brother and sister-in-law are infected with this thing,&quot; said David Perry, director of public education at Trend Micro Inc. &quot;Last year, everybody wanted to be loved. Apparently many people want to see a JPEG [picture] of Anna Kournikova.&quot;

The virus, which appears to have originated in Europe, comes as an attachment named &quot;AnnaKournikova.jpg.vbs&quot; and carries the message &quot;Hi: Check This!&quot; But it does not actually contain a photo of the tennis star.

Graham Cluley, senior technology consultant at Sophos Anti-Virus Inc., said the virus writer skillfully exploited Kournikova's sex appeal and &quot;the average fantasy of the guy who sits in front of the computer terminal.&quot;

The virus can automatically send copies of itself to everyone on a recipient's address book. It spreads primarily through Microsoft Outlook e-mail software on Windows computers.

Many anti-virus companies developed software updates to filter out the new virus.

Microsoft spokesman Adam Sohn said the company released a security update in June, shortly after the &quot;I Love You&quot; virus, that generates a warning any time a computer program attempts to access Outlook's address book.

Vincent Weafer, director of the Symantec Anti-Virus Research Center, partly attributed the virus's spread to timing.

&quot;Close to Valentine's Day, anything novel or different like this will get people's attention more than normal,&quot; he said. &quot;They are expecting messages from friends, maybe pictures of each other or cards. People lower their guards.&quot;

 

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1957 - 2008<br>Elite Moderator Emeritus<br>Troll H
Oct 9, 1999
2,772
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Sorry, I went back a few pages and didn't see it anywhere.