Virus Snarls Thousands of Computers and Slows Internet
NewsMax.com Wires
Monday, May 3, 2004
NEW YORK An Internet worm that takes advantage of a known
flaw with the Windows operating system raced around the world
Monday, snarling tens of thousands of computers and causing
Internet traffic to slow.
Though Microsoft Corp. had announced the flaw with the so-called
Local Security Authority Subsystem Service last month, many
computer owners had yet to apply the fix that the company had
released.
Unlike most outbreaks, the Sasser worm does not require users to
activate it by clicking on an e-mail attachment. Sasser is known as
a network worm because it can automatically scan the Internet for
computers with the security flaw and send a copy of itself there.
Security experts said the Sasser worm was spreading rapidly,
particularly as businesses reopened Monday but it still was not as
widespread as last summer's Blaster outbreak.
They said network operators have gotten more diligent about
properly applying the necessary security fixes, and because the
worm was first discovered late Friday, many were able to do so over
the weekend before employees arrived.
Finland's third largest bank, Sampo, closed 120 of its offices
for a few hours on Monday to update antivirus programs. E-banking
services and the bank's automated teller machines worked normally.
"We weren't hit by the worm, but we wanted make sure that we
wouldn't be affected by it so we closed the branch offices," Sampo
spokesman Hannu Vuola said. "The people who suffered the most were
those who had actually come to our banks to do business over the
counter."
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