There has been a bit of controversy about the validity of the threat of this worm, but regardless, the basic measures needed to prevent this is something all users should do anyway. 

In an event that hits the computer world only once every few years, security experts are racing against time to mitigate the impact of a bit of malware which is set to wreak havoc on a hard-coded date. As is often the case, that date is April 1.

Malware creators love to target April Fool's Day with their wares, and the latest worm, called Conficker C, could be one of the most damaging attacks we've seen in years.

Conficker first bubbled up in late 2008 and began making headlines in January as known infections topped 9 million computers. Now in its third variant, Conficker C, the worm has grown incredibly complicated, powerful, and virulent... though no one is quite sure exactly what it will do when D-Day arrives.

What do you need to do?

  1. Make sure Windows is fully updated.
  2. Make sure your anti-virus is up to date, and run a complete scan.  Microsoft also has a free Live OneCare scanner available.

Comments (Page 2)
4 Pages1 2 3 4 
on Mar 31, 2009

If we were to set the date in our computers back a month, to say March 1st, would we be able to avoid the attack (temporarily)?

It might, but why bother? Only 3-6% of computers in the US are estimated to be infected. I'm not sure about Canada, but I expect that the rate is similar.

There is a very simple and fast way to know whether or not your computer is infected. Simply reboot into "safe mode". Conficker C prevents this, so if you can do it, you're fine.

 

 

on Mar 31, 2009

I got a perfect solution for this. Don't use the internet for 3 days (just to be sure) and I think you will avoid it.

Sorry, but this won't work. The worm will 'phone home' as soon as you restore your connectivity.

 

on Mar 31, 2009

There is a very simple and fast way to know whether or not your computer is infected. Simply reboot into "safe mode". Conficker C prevents this, so if you can do it, you're fine.

if that's true, it would explain why its worse on xp than vista. Vista is very touchy about its system files...like...none..other.

my question is...with the incompatibilities between 32 and 64-bit, do 32-bit viruses affect 64-bit systems? and if so, then by what feat of software engineering have crackerz made them cross compatible?

on Mar 31, 2009

Yeah...would be nice to know "how" you can get this worm and maybe take steps to prevent it. Does it crawl up your butt or what?

on Mar 31, 2009

Emperor_Seth is right. The CIA and FBI need to investigate this, as well as anyone else who wants to. Microsoft has put a $250,000 bounty on the creators of this.

No one knows where this came from, but my guess is that it's coming from Eastern Europe, where a lot of viruses come from. The Storm worm is believe to have come from Russia.

on Mar 31, 2009

starkers

Failing that, arm the world's servers with firewalls that send the worms enmesse back to the point of origin, thus overloading the computer and the resulting blast blows their nuts off anyhow.

 

Impossible, the point of origin has so far been untraceable. The guy took one hell of a detour, sent it through thousands of computers before having one upload it. Unlikely they'll sort it out before April 1st.

on Mar 31, 2009

GeneralEtrius
No one knows where this came from, but my guess is that it's coming from Eastern Europe, where a lot of viruses come from. The Storm worm is believe to have come from Russia.

If it comes from Eastern Europe than that means the people responsible for Conficker are possibly Neo-Soviet Terrorist. So if Conficker C will make infected computers under the control of the people controlling it, than that means that if Conficker infects out missle launch control systems the people controlling it will have control of out Nuclear Weapons. Just saying this is how serious this is.

on Mar 31, 2009

Emperor_Seth

If it comes from Eastern Europe than that means the people responsible for Conficker are possibly Neo-Soviet Terrorist. So if Conficker C will make infected computers under the control of the people controlling it, than that means that if Conficker infects out missle launch control systems the people controlling it will have control of out Nuclear Weapons. Just saying this is how serious this is.

I seriously doubt that our nuclear missile control computers don't have some sort of anti-virus, or that they don't have the latest Windows updates, if indeed they use Windows (seems to me they would have a proprietary OS designed just for them to ensure greater security with something so sensitive).

However I will concede that if there is a sizable number of infected computers then the situation could theoretically be serious, though I doubt that it is all that serious.

on Mar 31, 2009

Emperor_Seth

Quoting GeneralEtrius, reply 20No one knows where this came from, but my guess is that it's coming from Eastern Europe, where a lot of viruses come from. The Storm worm is believe to have come from Russia.

If it comes from Eastern Europe than that means the people responsible for Conficker are possibly Neo-Soviet Terrorist. So if Conficker C will make infected computers under the control of the people controlling it, than that means that if Conficker infects out missle launch control systems the people controlling it will have control of out Nuclear Weapons. Just saying this is how serious this is.

 

I assure you, the US (or presumably any other country's) nuclear missile system is quite safe from web viruses. I don't even think they use windows. Not to mention the Military has their own network instead of the internet.

Russia is also a hotbed for all sorts of illegal computer activity that has nothing to do with the government sense they don't enforce most international computer laws (unless directed at the Kremlin of course).

on Mar 31, 2009

(unless directed at the Kremlin of course).

*watches as a bullet flies through GoaFan77's window and hits him in back of head for his comment*

Now here is something that would be fun to do if I had a spare computer laying around... http://xkcd.com/350/

on Mar 31, 2009

So if Conficker C will make infected computers under the control of the people controlling it, than that means that if Conficker infects out missle launch control systems the people controlling it will have control of out Nuclear Weapons.

 

A)  If the military isn't completely and utterly stupid (OK, no comment), as another poster pointed out they have all the appropriate updates and what not.

 

  If they have one ounce of sense, one fraction of a gram of sense, the computers running the nuclear missile silo's aren't networked.  No hacker can hack what they can't even touch.

on Mar 31, 2009

you know, i change my Bitdefender System Security to Kaspersky Internet Security becouse this one (kaspersky) has a very nice option that during the full system analisis it will show you if your system has some areas that need to check (vulnerabilities)....

...and that Bitdefender is a pain on the ass, it makes many programs (including WMP) to crash.

on Mar 31, 2009

If we were to set the date in our computers back a month, to say March 1st, would we be able to avoid the attack (temporarily)?

Experts don't think it will work as the virus will be getting the date and time from an internet time server (which WILL be correct) and ignoring the local system clock...

As for the launching of nuclear missiles etc... Don't they require a security turn key to enable the launch circuits? I wasn't aware a virus could do that....

on Mar 31, 2009

As for the launching of nuclear missiles etc... Don't they require a security turn key to enable the launch circuits? I wasn't aware a virus could do that....

Here is what happens: The virus hacks the nuclear missile launch systems. Then, it forces the operators monitors to display a hypnotic pattern, and tells the nuclear launch guys to fire. The nuke guys can't disobey, and so turn the key. Simple.

 

Samurye.

on Mar 31, 2009

the virus could bypass that requirement because, ultimately, the missles are launched by a computer.

 

4 Pages1 2 3 4