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Latest Sober worm sends German spam

Sober.q began spreading quickly online over the weekend

May 16, 2005 12:00 PM ET

IDG News Service - E-mail users perplexed by the barrage of German-language spam waiting in their in-boxes this morning can blame the latest version of the Sober mass-mailing worm, which began rapidly spreading over the weekend.
Sober.q uses both German- and English-language messages to direct recipients to Web sites with right-wing German nationalistic content, according to an advisory from e-mail security company MX Logic Inc. in Englewood, Colo. One of the URLs points to the Web site of the right-wing German National Democratic Party, the security firm said.
MX Logic said that it had seen over 125,000 instances of Sober.q overnight Saturday and into Sunday and labeled it as a high-severity threat. The variant is downloaded by computers already infected by the Sober.p worm, which began circulating earlier this month, MX Logic said. The virus writers appear to have remote control over the Sober.p-infected machines (see story), giving them a network from which to launch future spam and denial-of-service attacks.
The latest Sober variant is one of a relatively new type of "propaganda spam," meant to spread political messages rather than sell a product or service, MX Logic said. Circulation of the worm coincides with ceremonies marking the 60th anniversary of the end of World War II in Europe and examples of subject lines it sends include "Dresden 1945" and "Du wirst zum Sklaven gemacht!!!" ("You are made slaves!!!").
"We are certainly seeing more propaganda spam," said Graham Cluley, a senior technology consultant at Sophos PLC. Security researchers began detecting religious spam selling a particular view of life last year, Cluley said.
Although Sophos is seeing a lot of German-language spam sent by the new Sober variant, the worm itself doesn't appear to be spreading anymore, Cluley said.
E-mail users are advised to update their spam filters to guard against the new Sober spam.


Reprinted with permission from

IDG.net
Story copyright 2009 International Data Group. All rights reserved.

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