***VIRUS WARNING***Large-Scale Attack Hits Thousands of Web Sites NAME: Download.Ject/Scob

Amused

Elite Member
Apr 14, 2001
57,454
19,921
146
More info:

http://news.com.com/Corporate+Web+servers+infecting+visitors%27+PCs/2100-7349_3-5247187.html?tag=nefd.top

MS info page:

http://www.microsoft.com/security/incident/download_ject.mspx

To determine if the malicious code is on your computer, search for the following files:

Kk32.dll
Surf.dat

Steps for Windows XP users:

On the taskbar at the bottom of your screen, click Start, and then click Search.
Under What do you want to search for? click All files and folders.
Under All or part of the file name:
type: Kk32.dll
and then click the Search button.
Under All or part of the file name:
type: Surf.dat
and then click the Search button.


If either of these files is present, your computer may be infected.


Web Virus May Be Stealing Financial Data
New Scheme Causes Web Sites to Spread the Bug
By ANICK JESDANUN, AP

NEW YORK (June 26) - A computer virus designed to steal valuable information like passwords spread Friday through a new technique that converted popular Web sites into virus transmitters.

Though the impact of the ''Scob'' outbreak was mild compared with recent infections like ''Sasser'' and ''Blaster,'' security experts worried about its method of delivery.

With Scob, virus writers have discovered yet another way - beyond e-mail and network techniques - of distributing their malicious code.

Now that the exploit is out, it won't be long before others adapt it for spamming and for launching broad attacks to cripple the Internet, said Alfred Huger, senior director of engineering at security company Symantec Corp.

The infection, first discovered by Microsoft Corp. on Thursday, appears to take advantage of three separate flaws with Microsoft products and can be difficult to detect.

Stephen Toulouse, a security program manager at Microsoft, said software updates to fix two of them had been released in April, but the third flaw was newly discovered and had no patch available yet.

He recommended that computer owners obtain the latest security updates for Microsoft products and their anti-virus and firewall programs. For the flaw that lacks a patch, he said, users should also turn up security settings on Microsoft's Internet Explorer browsers to the highest levels.

Users could also turn off the ''JavaScript'' feature on their Microsoft browsers, though doing so could cripple functions on some sites.

The virus does not affect Macintosh versions of Internet Explorer, nor does it spread through non-Microsoft browsers like Mozilla and Opera.

Users can search their computers for the files ''Kk32.dll'' or ''Surf.dat'' to see if they are infected. Removal tools are available from major anti-virus vendors.

Experts said the infection was unusually broad but wasn't substantially interfering with Internet traffic.

The U.S. Computer Emergency Readiness Team warned that any Web site, even those trusted by users, might be a vector for spreading the virus.

Security experts worked Friday to pin down how hackers managed to infect hundreds and possibly thousands of Web sites. It appears to target at least one recent version of Microsoft software for operating Web sites, called Internet Information Server.

Hackers made subtle changes to the Web site so visitors get a piece of code that's designed to retrieve, from a Russian Web site, software that records a person's keystrokes.

Such data, which can include credit card numbers, bank accounts and passwords, are collected for remote delivery to hackers, experts say.

The virus, however, does not attempt to spread itself, helping to limit its effect.

Web sites have been used before to spread a form of spyware called ''browser hijackers.'' One, known as Qhosts, disables access to major search engines and resets the Internet Explorer browser home page to a little-known site.

But those typically have involved ''users having been visiting shady sites,'' Chris Kraft, senior security analyst at Sophos Inc. Here, hackers plant the code on business, government and other everyday sites they do not normally control.

''This is kind of ingenious,'' Kraft said.
 

Amused

Elite Member
Apr 14, 2001
57,454
19,921
146
''Users should be aware that any Web site, even those that may be trusted by the user, may be affected by this activity and thus contain potentially malicious code,''

In other words, all those porn sites you guys visit may give you more than just spyware. :p
 

Nebor

Lifer
Jun 24, 2003
29,582
12
76
Originally posted by: Amused
''Users should be aware that any Web site, even those that may be trusted by the user, may be affected by this activity and thus contain potentially malicious code,''

In other words, all those porn sites you guys visit may give you more than just spyware. :p

And all those hookers you visit may give you... eeeeeehhhh.
 

yukichigai

Diamond Member
Apr 23, 2003
6,404
0
76
Originally posted by: Freejack2
And Norton Antivirus still hasn't updated their definitions. :roll:
BWA HA HA, foolish Norton user! Bow before the power that is AVG!

I dunno if Grisoft updated their definitions. All I know is AVG has caught a lot more viruses than Norton ever did for me.
 

PanzerIV

Diamond Member
Dec 19, 2002
6,875
1
0
I wish we could chop off the fingers of these losers who keep releasing this stuff. I am sick to death of it. Of course there are a lot of very successful companies whose very livlihood depends on this sh!t to continue indefinitely.
 

Schadenfroh

Elite Member
Mar 8, 2003
38,416
4
0
Originally posted by: sandorski
Damn Skynet!

so that is why that hot chick showed up last night at work asking about where i was. good thing i stepped out early that night, and to think, i was dissapointed when i found out that i missed her
 

Amused

Elite Member
Apr 14, 2001
57,454
19,921
146
Originally posted by: Schadenfroh
Originally posted by: Amused
Originally posted by: yukichigai
Originally posted by: Amused
Originally posted by: PatboyX
why isnt this stickied?

Nobody likes me :(
At least not in a healthy way.

Are you volunteering for something?

this is why it is not stickied

Why is that? Because people decide to crap in my thread?

The info in the OP is just as important, thread craps or not.
 

LordThing

Golden Member
Jun 8, 2001
1,970
0
0
Maybe if people keep crapping or hijacking the thread, it will stay bumped far enough up for everyone to see.

/Just a thought.
 

Amused

Elite Member
Apr 14, 2001
57,454
19,921
146
Originally posted by: LordThing
Maybe if people keep crapping or hijacking the thread, it will stay bumped far enough up for everyone to see.

/Just a thought.

A good thought at that.
 

imported_Strang

Platinum Member
Jan 8, 2001
2,177
0
0
Originally posted by: Stark
has anyone seen this one yet? just wondering how cautious i need to be.

I'm curious too -- I hadn't heard anything about it until seeing this post, but it'd be nice to know what to look for if/when it hits my company's network.