'SOBIG'
CALLED FASTEST E-MAIL VIRUS OUTBREAK
SPREAD AIDED BY BUILT-IN E-MAIL SOFTWARE
NETWORKS AROUND WORLD SLOWED, SHUT DOWN
Author: Anick Jesdanun
Associated Press
Edition: Final
Section: Business
Page: C11
Dateline:
Estimated printed pages: 2
Article Text:
MessageLabs Inc., which scans
e-mail for viruses, said that within 24 hours it had scanned more than 1
million copies of the "F" variant of the "Sobig"
virus, which was blamed for computer disruptions at businesses, colleges and
other institutions worldwide.
The previous record was
"Klez," with 250,000 copies spotted during its first 24 hours earlier
this year, MessageLabs chief technology officer Mark
Sunner said yesterday.
There have been faster outbreaks
on the Internet, but those circulated through networking functions built into
Windows operating systems.
The "Slammer" worm
struck more than 75,000 computers in just 10 minutes in January, the number of
infected computers doubling every 8.5 seconds, according to researchers at the
E-mail viruses like Sobig
can hit the same computer multiple times, so the number of
infections are not directly comparable.
Sunner said the latest virus was
able to spread so quickly because it essentially had e-mail software built-in.
Previous viruses relied on existing software packages like Microsoft's Outlook
and did not spread as quickly among users of rival e-mail software.
Sobig began appearing Tuesday, just a week after a separate
virus, "Blaster," wreaked havoc on computer systems across the world.
A variant of the Blaster virus
fouled signaling and dispatching systems at CSX Corp. on Wednesday, a day after
similar troubles brought down Air
Sobig does not physically damage computers, files or critical
data, but it tied up computer and networking resources, forcing networks such
as the University of Wisconsin-Madison to shut down outside access to its
e-mail system Wednesday.
"We were removing 30,000
bad e-mails an hour," said Jeff Savoy, an information security officer at
the school.
In
The owner of one of the
Internet's most popular e-mail lists, technologist David Farber, was livid
about Sobig.
"I got 1,300 junk e-mails
'delivered' this AM," he said in a message to subscribers yesterday.
"Find the person and put him/her in jail."
Copyright (c) 2003 Lexington
Herald-Leader
Record Number: 0308250284