Storm Worm Sends Trouble for Valentine’s Day
If you unexpectedly receive a Valentine’s Day e-card, give it a close look before you get sentimental. It may be a stealth virus called the Storm Worm.
With lovers expected to express their feelings on Thursday, the FBI is warning about spam e-mails spreading the Storm Worm. The e-mail directs the recipient to visit on a link to retrieve a bogus e-card. Once the link is clicked, malware is downloaded and the recipient’s machine becomes part of the Storm Worm botnet.
A botnet is a network of compromised machines under the control of a singled-out user. Botnets typically facilitate criminal activity such as spam, identity theft, denial-of-service attacks, and spreading malware to others on the World Wide Web.
“The Storm Worm virus has capitalized on various holidays in the last year by sending millions of e-mails advertising an e-card link within the text of the spam e-mail,” The FBI warned in an advisory. “Valentine’s Day has been
Same Old Storm Tricks
Indeed, safety measure firm Sophos has reported that virus writers are increasingly using love, money and lust to energize victims to activate malicious cipher. Sophos says the latest variation is a romantically themed e-mail with subject lines such as “I Like You,” “Powerful Love,” “Tower of Love,” “You Stay In My Heart,” “Hugs And Kisses,” “Val-ANT-ines,” “Just You,” and “What is Love?” The e-mails look sweet, but contain a nasty payload — the Storm Worm.
Every year in the run-up to Valentine’s Day, citizens let their guard down and are fooled by hackers and cybercriminals using the cover of romance, according to Graham Cluley, a senior technology consultant at Sophos.
“You would think that society would learn,…
Orginal post by Top Tech News
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