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FYI, here is a recent article from TechRepublic.com
(http://articles.techrepublic.com.com/2100-1009_11-6146321.html?tag=nl.e019)
about an e-mail worm disguised as a New Year's greeting that is currently
making the rounds on the Internet (our own antivirus firewall has detected
and removed over 50 instances of the infected e-mails in the past week):
 

Worm-laden messages are titled "Happy New Year" and contain an attachment
called either postcard.exe or postcard.zip, according to experts at
VeriSign's
<http://articles.techrepublic.com.com/2100-1009_11-5787653.html?tag=nl>
iDefense Labs, which provides information on security flaws and exploits. If
the attachment is opened, malicious software is downloaded from the Internet
and can infect computers running Windows operating systems.

Once a computer is infected, it looks for open mail proxies and begins
spamming mail to infect other computers. The worm is already moving quickly
across the Internet, at a rate of five e-mails per second on at least one
large network, according to the iDefense Labs Web site.

Security experts say that although the virus looks similar to the Warezov
Trojan horse that has plagued the Internet for the past month, it is
actually a new variant of the worm and has been largely undetected as of
December 28. iDefense
<http://dw.com.com/redir?destUrl=http%3A%2F%2Flabs.idefense.com&siteId=11&oI
d=2100-1009-6146321&ontId=1009&lop=nl_ex>  performed a triage analysis of
the threat and found that more than a dozen codes were installed on a
computer from several worm and Trojan horse families. More than 160 e-mail
servers are used by the worm to send out spam to potential victims, the
company said.

High volumes of mass
<http://articles.techrepublic.com.com/2100-1009_11-6136901.html?tag=nl>
e-mails are usually sent around the holidays. This year has been no
different, experts say. The spike in holiday spam is largely attributed to
the fact that people have been more likely to open the messages. 

Consumers have been shopping online more, desperate for gift ideas. They
also have been expecting electronic greeting cards from friends and family.
Malicious
<http://articles.techrepublic.com.com/2100-1009_11-6003322.html?tag=nl>
spammers have been able to exploit this expectation by designing Trojan
horses that can fool unsuspecting users.

Antivirus software maker McAfee issued several advisories over the holidays,
warning customers to be wary of such Trojans. On Wednesday, it cautioned
users about a malicious e-mail attachment named Christmas+Blessing-4.ppt
that installs software enabling attackers to remotely access a compromised
computer.

Like many Trojans, the "Happy New Year" worm is not recognized by all virus
scanners, so users should be extremely cautious when opening e-mail
attachments, experts say.

"The period of greatest risk is through New Year's Day, when antivirus
protection is the lowest for this new threat and users are most apt to click
on a holiday-related message," said Ken Dunham, director of the Rapid
Response Team at iDefense Labs. "Everyone should be on guard for e-mails and
other content potentially harboring malicious code during the holiday
period."

 
 
Mike Buras
Network Systems Administrator
Central Texas Library System, Inc.
1005 West 41st Street
Austin, Texas 78756
Phone: (512) 583-0704, ext. 15
Fax: (512) 583-0709
 <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 

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