Elinor Mills | Jan 18, 2009

A worm that spreads via removable devices, network shares, and weak
administrator passwords--in addition to exploiting a critical Windows
vulnerability--is spreading so fast it is becoming an epidemic, a security
researcher said late last week.
The worm, known as Kido, Conficker, or Downadup, initially exploited
MS08-067, a vulnerability considered critical for Windows 2000, XP, and Server
2003. It was
patched
in October.
Newer variants have been configured to give the worm the ability to infect
via other means to get onto the network, said Roel Schouwenberg, a senior
research engineer at Kaspersky Lab.
"The Kido authors are trying to get into these networks by infected removable
devices and by using other Trojans to install Kido on a computer, which will
then try to infect other machines on the local network," he said in an e-mail
statement. The worm "is currently causing an epidemic."
An estimated 3.5 million computers are believed to be infected with the worm,
ZDNet reports.
Via
Crave CNET
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