BANGALORE, INDIA: Smitten by bug in its antivirus program, McAfee on
Friday said that it was working on additional protocols and additional
capabilities in Artemis Technology to provide another level of
protection against false positives.

Artemis is a McAfee technology that its desktop software uses to help
identify suspicious files by matching their digital “fingerprints”
with a database stored on the company's servers.

It may be recalled here that hundreds of computers in companies,
hospitals and schools around the world got stuck repeatedly rebooting
themselves on Wednesday after an antivirus program identified a normal
Windows file as a virus. Many of the customers were stated to be
suffering from the bug on Friday also.

“McAfee is aware that a number of customers have incurred a false
positive error due to this release. We believe that this incident has
impacted less than one percent of our enterprise accounts globally and
a fraction of that is within the consumer base of products such as
McAfee VirusScan Plus, McAfee Internet Security Suite and McAfee Total
Protection,” Nitin Jyoti, Manager, Malware Research-India, McAfee Labs
said in an interview with CIOL.

However, the spokesman could not not give any numbers regarding the
customers affected in India.

Impact

The spokesman said that a  subset of systems running Windows XP
Service Pack 3 and having specific versions of the svchost.exe file
was affected. Svchost.exe files found on Windows 2000, Windows 2003,
Windows XP Service Pack 1, Windows XP Service Pack 2, Windows Vista,
Windows 7 and older versions of Windows were not affected.

McAfee corporate customers who have the McAfee VirusScan Enterprise
product have reported a variety of symptoms, ranging from a system
“blue screen” (not to be confused with BSOD, but due to the issues
with Explorer and svchost.exe), loss of network connectivity,
inability to use USB, and experiencing a perpetual state of reboot.
Users have reported these symptoms when both the files are present on
the system (in quarantine), or has been deleted entirely.

Minimal impact has been observed to McAfee’s consumer customers
because McAfee rolled back the faulty DAT before the update hit the
majority of consumer user systems.

Measures

Jyoti said McAfee is implementing additional QA protocols for any
releases that directly impact critical system files. They are also
rolling out additional capabilities in Artemis that will provide
another level of protection against false positives by leveraging an
expansive whitelist of critical system files and their associated
cryptographic hashes.

He said the  vast majority of their customers are now back up and
running and McAfee remains focused on those that remain affected.
“Nearly all of our 7,000 employees have been working around the clock
to help customers to get back to business as usual and to make sure
this never happens again.”

©CIOL Bureau

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