• 2 New Worms Use Valentine's Day as  Bait

    2 New Worms Use Valentine's Day as Bait

    Techtree News Staff, Jan 25, 2008 1507 hrs IST

    PandaLabs, Panda Security's laboratory for detecting and analyzing malware, has detected 2 new worms, Nuwar.OL and Valentin.E, which use the topic of St. Valentine's Day to spread.

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PandaLabs, Panda Security's laboratory for detecting and analyzing malware, has detected 2 new worms, Nuwar.OL and Valentin.E, which use the topic of St. Valentine's Day to spread.

"Year after year we see the appearance of several malware strains that use St Valentine's Day as bait to attract users", explains Luis Corrons, Technical Director of PandaLabs. "This indicates that cyber-crooks are still reaping the benefits of this technique and many people still fall into the trap."

Nuwar.OL arrives on computers by email with subjects like "I Love You Soo Much", "Inside My Heart" or " You In My Dreams". The text of the email includes a link to a website that downloads the malicious code. The page is very simple and looks like a romantic greeting card, with a large pink heart.

Once it has infected a computer, the worm sends out a large amount of emails to the infected user's contacts, in order to spread. This also creates a heavy load on networks and slows down the computer.

Valentin.E is very similar to this. Like the Nuwar worm, it spreads by email in messages with subjects like "Searching for true Love" or "True Love" and an attached file called "friends4u". If the targeted user opens the file, a copy of the worm gets downloaded on the user's computer.

The malicious code installs on the computer as a file with the .scr extension. If the user runs it, Valentin.E shows a new desktop background to trick them, while it makes several copies of itself on the computer. Then, the worm sends out emails with copies of itself from the infected computer to spread and infect more users.

Providing tips to avoid falling victim to one of these malicious codes, PandaLabs suggests users not to open any emails or run attached files that come from unknown sources. They also advise not to click any links included in email messages, even though they may come from reliable sources. Instead, they recommend type out the link in the address bar.

PandaLabs recommends staying on alert for files that claim to be Valentine's greeting cards, romantic videos, etc.

Lastly, they suggest having an effective security solution installed on your computer, capable of detecting both known and new malware strains.

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Discussion Board
(2) Comments
Bhavya Wadhwa
,New delhi (india), on Jan 28, 2008 03:35 PM
Now-a- days we are getting more unconcerned about these types of viruses. There should be a commitee or an organisation held up by microsoft or some other who are concerned. they should tell about the latest threats which pose to our PC's. But thanks to techtree that they have messaged about Nuwar.OL &Valentin.E. I haveN't come to know about the worm if i haven;'t opened the website today. Thank You.
Prakash.Parulka
,Harda.M.P.India, on Jan 27, 2008 09:23 PM
Thank you for informing us about the malware in advance.

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