Beware of Microsoft Security Updates

Security firms Wednesday warned that another virus began making its rounds
on the Net this week, and this one is masquerading as a
Microsoft security update.

The virus, a mass-mailing worm variously dubbed I-Worm.Gibe, W32/Gibe@mm,
WORM_GIBE.A, etc., does not carry a destructive payload,
but is capable of installing a backdoor Trojan which allows remote access to
an infected system.

Gibe arrives as an attachment named Q216309.exe to a message that begins:

From: Microsoft Corporation Security Center

mailto:rdquest12@microsoft.com]

To: Microsoft Customer

Subject: Internet Security Update

Attachment: q216309.exe

Microsoft Customer,

this is the latest version of security update, the update which

eliminates all known security vulnerabilities affecting Internet

Explorer and MS Outlook/Express as well as six new

vulnerabilities, and is discussed in Microsoft Security Bulletin

MS02-005. Install now to protect your computer from these

vulnerabilities, the most serious of which could allow an

attacker to run code on your computer.

The message then goes on to describe the vulnerabilities the worm purports
to correct.

The worm, written in Visual Basic, uses Microsoft Outlook and its own SMTP
engine to spread. When Q216309.exe it creates two copies
of itself, drops the component which uses Outlook and SMTP to spread,
creates a Backdoor Trojan that opens port 12378, creates a
data file that it uses to store all e-mail addresses it finds, and creates
another component that searches for e-mail addresses from
the Outlook Address Book and all addresses found in .htm, .html, .asp, and
.php files. Once the final component has those e-mail
addresses, it writes them to the data file.

Finnish security firm F-Secure Corp. said Wednesday that victims can get rid
of the worm by deleting all its components from an
infected system. It noted that if some components are locked while Windows
is active, they have to be deleted from pure DOS or
renamed with a different extension with immediate system restart.

Many anti-virus firms have already updated their virus definitions to detect
the worm.

Get the Free Newsletter!

Subscribe to our newsletter.

Subscribe to Daily Tech Insider for top news, trends & analysis

News Around the Web