With new Bagle and Netsky worms, March comes in with a roar

'I think it's effectively a blitzkrieg,' said one security expert
Paul Roberts
 

March 1, 2004 (IDG News Service) The saying goes that March comes in like a lion and goes out like a lamb. But with new versions of the Bagle e-mail worm and a virulent new form of the Netsky virus, March's arrival is looking more wormy than leonine.
Five new versions of Bagle and a new variant of Netsky appeared over the weekend and are spreading rapidly on the Internet, generating a huge volume of virus-infected e-mail messages. The new virus versions use a variety of so-called social engineering techniques to fool users. Some new variants also hide in password-protected .zip files to slip past antivirus filters and into users' e-mail boxes, said Graham Cluley, a senior technology consultant at Sophos PLC.
Netsky.D, a new version of the Netsky worm, is believed to be the biggest threat in the group. As of today, Netsky.D was spreading rapidly on the Internet and flooding e-mail servers with infected messages, according to Cluley.
Some of Sophos' customers were receiving thousands of Netsky.D infected messages each hour. That number could increase as U.S. workers return to their desks after the weekend, he said.
The original Netsky worm first appeared on Feb. 16. Since then, three more variants have been released on the Internet. Like its predecessors, Netsky.D scans an infected computer's hard drive for files containing e-mail addresses and then sends copies of itself to those addresses, antivirus companies said.
Netsky.D affects machines running Microsoft Corp.'s Windows operating system and arrives in e-mail messages with randomly generated subject lines such as "Re: Document," "Re: Your picture" or "Re:approved." The Netsky.D worm disguises its payload as a .pif (for program information file) attachment that also has a randomly generated name such as "my_details.pif," "document.pif" or "mp3music.pif."
Unlike its predecessors, NetSky.D doesn't spread on peer-to-peer networks, and doesn't use a .zip file to conceal its contents, according to antivirus company Network Associates Inc.
The gaggle of new Bagle worms that appeared in recent days use many of the same tricks as the new Netsky worms, and some new techniques, according to antivirus companies.
Bagle versions C, D, E, F and G appeared between Saturday and Monday and are variants of the first Bagle worm, which appeared on Jan. 19. All versions target systems running Windows, harvest e-mail addresses from infected machines and open a TCP port to listen for commands from a remote attacker, according to an alert released by computer security company iDefense Inc.
Bagle.C appears to be the most virulent of the bunch. Sophos has received hundreds of reports of messages containing that version, which uses a Microsoft Office 2000 Excel icon to fool users. Other Bagle variants use Windows folder icons, Cluley said.
Bagle versions F and G also use a password-protected .zip file to get past antivirus scanners. Password-protected .zip files have encrypted contents that cannot be read by even sophisticated antivirus scanners. However, virus writers must supply the password information in the body of a message before users can open the .zip and get to the virus file inside, which makes it harder for the worm to spread, he said.
The use of .zip files to hide e-mail viruses is increasingly popular among virus writers, he said.
Many recipients may be used to receiving zipped attachments from correspondents and open the Bagle and Netsky attachments out of curiosity, Cluley said.
With e-mail viruses slipping by gateway protections, companies need desktop antivirus software to stop the worm from infecting machines on which it is launched, he said. Organizations must also invest in user education to stop risky behavior such as opening strange e-mail attachments, he said.
The weekend round of virus outbreaks is just the latest in a weeks-long scourge that began in mid-January with the first version of Bagle and has spawned multiple versions of the Bagle, Mydoom and Netsky worms. "I think it's effectively a blitzkrieg," said Cluley.
Despite only modest changes between worm versions, the new Bagle and Netsky variants appear to be the work of the original virus authors. "Someone who has access to the source code is creating these," he said.
Leading antivirus companies posted software updates to detect the new worm versions and tools to remove the worms from infected machines. Companies advised customers to update their antivirus software as soon as possible to prevent infection.