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Virus Top Twenty for February 2007
In last month’s Top Twenty, we noted that Warezov worms had been almost totally beaten back by Bagle. Only a single Warezov variant remained in January's Top Twenty, and Bagle.gt led the rankings. However, the world of computer viruses takes after nature, in that it abhors a vacuum, and as usually, new and more dangerous malicious programs have come to fill the void. This was the case in February, when we witnessed several epidemics caused by a new family of worms: Zhelatin.
Zhelatin is the ‘storm worm’ that got such wide coverage in the mass media at the beginning of the year. The worm spreads as emails with a range of topics designed to pique the recipient's curiosity - the terrible hurricane in Western Europe, the death of President Putin, and the resurrection of Saddam Hussein. Although Zhelatin was initially thought to be a new Warezov variant, closer analysis revealed a new family of malicious programs which probably originated in Asia.
During February we issued three virus alerts with a 'medium' threat rating. All these alerts were due to the rapid spread of new Zhelatin variants in mail traffic. Naturally, these outbreaks have had an effect on the February Top Twenty: out of the nine new malicious programs, six of them are Zhelatin variants. The struggle between Zhelatin and Bagle.gt resulted in a veteran worm, Netsky.t, taking first place, while Bagle.gt dropped back to second position. Zhelatin, meanwhile, managed by weight of numbers to occupy four of the top ten places.
When a new leader heads the rankings, there's usually a general shake-up, with new programs making their first appearance, and old viruses making a comeback. As noted above, there are nine new malicious programs in the February Top Twenty, and four re-entries, including some old friends such as Nyxem.e, Scano.gen and Netsky.b. This demonstrates once again that today's email worms have a long lifespan, and may be found in traffic years after their first appearance.
Other malicious programs made up a significant percentage (12.86%) of all malicious code found in mail traffic, indicating that a considerable number of other worms and Trojans are currently actively circulating.
Summary:
- New: Email-Worm.Win32.Zhelatin.dam, Email-Worm.Win32.Zhelatin.o, Email-Worm.Win32.Warezov.ls, Email-Worm.Win32.Zhelatin.u, Email-Worm.Win32.Zhelatin.m, Email-Worm.Win32.Zhelatin.r, Trojan-Downloader.Win32.Tibs.jr, Email-Worm.Win32.Zhelatin.t, Packed.Win32.PePatch.gr
- Moved up: Email-Worm.Win32.NetSky.t, Net-Worm.Win32.Mytob.c
- Moved down: Email-Worm.Win32.Bagle.gt, Email-Worm.Win32.NetSky.q, Email-Worm.Win32.NetSky.aa, Email-Worm.Win32.Bagle.gen
- Re-entry: Email-Worm.Win32.Scano.gen, Email-Worm.Win32.Nyxem.e, Email-Worm.Win32.NetSky.b, Net-Worm.Win32.Mytob.t
02 Mar 2007
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