Ray Evans Harrell wrote:


By RIVA RICHMOND The Associated Press Wednesday, August 20, 2003; 10:16 AM

NEW YORK - A new strain of one of the most virulent e-mail viruses
ever spread quickly worldwide Tuesday morning, causing fresh
annoyance to users worn out by last week's outbreak of the Blaster
worm.

The new virus, named "Sobig.F" by computer security companies,
attacks Windows users via e-mail and file-sharing networks. It also
deposits a Trojan horse, or hacker back door, that can be used to
turn victims' PCs into senders of spam e-mail.

I've collected some news quotes about the blackout and our supposed freedom achieved thru complex networks, at

http://www.users.cloud9.net/~bradmcc/quotes6.html#Q183

I still think the image of the Heavenly Hierarchy
elaborated by the Roman Catholic Church in the Middle
Ages is a productive analogy for our relation to
technology.  "I believe in one power grid, the network almighty,
maker of heaven and earth, and in the computer its only
son our lord...."  "Holy hard disks have mercy upon
us miserable offenders -- forgive those who have
forgotten to do their backups, and save the backups we have made from
becoming unreadable -- this we ask in the thy merciful name...."

Fortunately, my cats and the pleasures they
provide, are relatively independent of the power grid....

\brad mccormick


MessageLabs Inc., a company that filters e-mail for corporations, had blocked more than 100,000 copies of Sobig.F by midday Tuesday, making it by far the most active virus of the day.

"It's definitely spreading very quickly, just an incredible ramp-up
so far this morning," said Brian Czarny, marketing director at
MessageLabs. The variant is likely to be one of the more successful
versions of a very successful virus strain, he said.

The previous Sobig.A and Sobig.B variants are both on MessageLabs'
list of the biggest 10 e-mail viruses of all time.

The e-mail message that carries Sobig.F has the subject line "Re:
Details" and the message "Please see attached file for details." If a
recipient clicks on the attachment, which can have multiple names
ending in the .pif file extension, the computer will be infected.

The virus will then send itself out to names found in the victim's
address book and will use one of these names to forge a return
address. As such, the infected party may not quickly learn of the
infection, while an innocent party may get the blame for helping to
propagate it.

Like all the other Sobig viruses, this version is programmed to
self-destruct after two weeks, in this case on Sept. 10.


--
  Let your light so shine before men,
              that they may see your good works.... (Matt 5:16)

Prove all things; hold fast that which is good. (1 Thes 5:21)

<![%THINK;[SGML+APL]]> Brad McCormick, Ed.D. / [EMAIL PROTECTED]
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  Visit my website ==> http://www.users.cloud9.net/~bradmcc/

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