Help | Contact | Forum | Affiliates | Press Purchase Download Features Screenshots Demo

Michael Jackson Malware Rings in July 4 Weekend

July 4 weekend is usually a time for barbecues, beach parties and Independence Day spam. But the death of pop superstar Michael Jackson may have changed the face of the annual spam barrage.

Instead of just the typical deluge of e-mails luring users with tales of fireworks displays, spammers and malware authors are still riding high on interest in Jackson’s death. Over at Sophos, researchers are reporting that an e-mail with the subject line “Rememebring Michael Jackson” was circulating with a worm in tow. The e-mail has a zip file attached that infects victims if downloaded.

“The e-mail, which claims to come from sarah@michaeljackson.com, says that the attached ZIP file contains secret songs and photos of Michael Jackson,” blogged Graham Cluley, senior technology consultant at Sophos. “However, the reality is that opening the attachment exposes you to infection - and if your computer is hit you will be spreading the worm onto other internet users. Besides spreading via e-mail, the malware is also capable of spreading as an Autorun component on USB memory sticks (an increasingly common trend for malware as use of these devices has become more and more popular).”

Sophos detects the malware as Mal/ZipMal-B and Mal/VB-AD, and recommends users keep their anti-virus products up-to-date.

Several other malicious spam campaigns centered on Jackson's death have been launched lately as well. 


Read Original Story



News 8 months ago



Related Stories:

Webmasters Beware: The Other Kind Of Spam

California Man Accused Of Trying To Extort NY Life Insurance

Anthony Digati arrested for allegedly threatening New York Life with email spam attack

Energizer Duo software suffers backdoor Trojan bother

Qualys to scan Web sites for malware

McAfee Says Hackers Sought Companies’ ‘Crown Jewels’ (Update2)

McAfee: Source code is easy target within corporations

The Latest BlackBerry Spyware Scare: Don't Worry, Yet

Spamhaus DNS Blacklist IDs Spam Domains

Botnets cause surge in February spam