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'Experimental' security fix is malware, Microsoft says

Redmond warns of phony e-mails claiming to include Windows security alerts

October 13, 2008 12:00 PM ET

IDG News Service - Scammers are sending out phony e-mails that claim to include critical Windows security alerts, Microsoft Corp. warned Monday.

The fake alerts describe themselves as part of a new "experimental private version of an update for all Microsoft Windows OS users," Microsoft said in a note on the scam, posted Monday.

The e-mails then instruct the victim to download an attachment, which is actually a malicious Trojan Horse program known as Win32/Haxdoor. This software records sensitive information such as passwords and credit card numbers and sends this data back to the attackers who are running the scam.

The malware is detected by antivirus programs as well as Microsoft's free Microsoft Malicious Software Removal Tool (MSRT).

The warning comes the day before Microsoft is set to deliver 11 genuine security fixes. These updates, due Tuesday at around 10 a.m. Pacific include critical security updates for Windows Active Directory, Internet Explorer, Excel and the Microsoft Host Integration Server.

But they will be delivered via Microsoft's standard automated update tools. Major software vendors such as Microsoft simply do not distribute security patches via e-mail.

"As a matter of company policy, Microsoft will never send you an executable attachment," wrote Microsoft spokesman Christopher Budd in a blog posting on the scam. "If you get an e-mail that claims to be a security notification with an attachment, delete it. It is always a spoof."

Microsoft does, however, send out security notification e-mails to customers who have asked to be told whenever patches are released or updated. These e-mails are in plain text and never contain any sort of attachment, Budd said.

Users who have doubts about any security notification e-mail they've received can go to Microsoft's TechNet security Web site, which contains the same information as its e-mail notifications.


Reprinted with permission from

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

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