Update: A Sobig Primer

By | November 24, 2011
 From the Annoying And Pointless Email Notification Dept comes this: an automated alert from a website that doesn’t quite get it. As you know, the Sobig virus/worm spreads like crazy because it raids people’s address books and then fires off copies of itself to emails it finds there. But to confuse people into thinking the email is legitimate it uses those email addresses so that emails containing the worm appear to be from those people. So if you get infected and your Outlook address book contains the email addresses of Tom, Dick and Harry, those three guys will receive infected emails from you, but they’re also likely to receive infected emails that appear to be from each other — Tom from Dick, Dick from Harry, etc. It’s called email spoofing. With me so far?
 
What it doesn’t mean (and this is where webmasters need to wise up) is that Tom, Dick or Harry are actually infected. They don’t need to have actually opened the infected email (and therefore allow Sobig into their machine) for infected emails to start appearing in their name. So, if you find you’re getting weird bounced emails that appear to indicate you’ve been sending out copies of the Sobig worm (‘The following message was undeliverable’ or somesuch), you may not have been. It may have come from someone who’s got your email address in their contact book. The problem is, of course, that you can’t always tell who, because the email you receive may have been spoofed a dozen times before it got back to you.
 
All this is an inevitable side-effect of a fast propagating worm. Not much you can do about it. What frosts my shorts up is receiving automated emails such as the following:
 
################# VIRUS NOTIFICATION #################
 
A message you sent to
 
[email address of someone I’ve never heard of]
 
contains a virus or a worm, and was NOT delivered.
 

DATE:  Tue, 26 Aug 2003 11:22:45 –0400
SUBJECT: Re: Your application
VIRUS:  W32/Sobig-F
 
It is possible your computer is infected without your knowledge.
Please download a current virus scanner and check your computer.
 
Thank you.
 
######################################################
 
This kind of email is, I’m afraid to say, just dumb. It’s incorrect, it merely confuses people AND it adds to the circulating junk that Sobig has alrady created. Please, please, please, webmasters and anti-virus makers: don’t include this kind of feature in your products or activate them. It’s a waste of time and merely exposes how little you know about the nature of the problem.
 
And for the rest of you, don’t freak out if you get an email like this. For sure, check your anti-virus software is up-to-date and regularly checking your PC. But don’t automatically assume you’re infected, just because some fool says you are.

Update: Microsoft Goes Soft in Thailand

By | November 24, 2011
 It’d be too much to suggest that Bill Gates reads my column, but Microsoft seem to be buying my idea (well not mine, really) that prices of their software should be geared to what local people can afford. IDG News Service’s Taipei Bureau reports that the US software company has cut the price of its Windows operating system and Office application suite in Thailand. Quoting a report released by market analyst Gartner Inc (it’s an Acrobat PDF file) Microsoft has reduced the cost of an Office and Windows package there for $40 and may do the same thing in China.
 
The move seems to be in the face of a government program which ended up selecting Red Hat Inc.’s Linux operating system and Sun Microsystems Inc.’s StarOffice productivity suite when Microsoft did not at first participate. Windows XP in the U.S. sells for between $85 and $130, IDG says, while Office XP Professional sells for about $250.
 
All this can only be good news, and bad news — eventually — for pirates.
 
 

News: Norton Chips In

By | November 24, 2011
 I should have known, given the whole virus thing is big business, that if one company announces a new product, its rival down the street isn’t likely to stay silent. Hot on the heels (or maybe before, who knows) of McAfee’s upgrade to its VirusScan, Symantec Corp.announced Norton AntiVirus 2004, although tellingly it’s not ‘widely available’ until early September. (Not trying to muddy McAfee’s launch, are we lads?)
 
 
Norton AntiVirus 2004 takes a slightly different approach to the growing threat of worms, rather than viruses (worms jump aboard without the user doing anything like loading a file, while viruses depend on the user actually doing something). Norton AntiVirus 2004 will include scans for programs on the user’s computer that can be used with malicious intent to compromise the security of a system, spy on the user’s private data, or track users’ online behavior. AntiVirus will identify and block these threats at the point of entry to the system, detecting the threats during scans of email and instant message attachments, or during scheduled or on-demand system scans. This seems a little different to McAfee, although on the surface this all doesn’t sound that new. I’ll take a closer look and get back to you.
 
Norton AntiVirus 2004 and Norton AntiVirus 2004 Professional will be available for an estimated retail price of US$49.95 and US$69.95

McAfee: The Worm Stops Here

By | November 24, 2011
 McAfee today have unveiled a new version of McAfee VirusScan, equipped with new features including an enhanced WormStopper, which automatically detects and alerts users when their systems are attempting to send email to an unusually large number of addresses. It also alerts users when the system attempts to send out too many single emails within a 30-second period, helping to ensure that new mass-mailing worms cannot spread without the knowledge of the user. Not a bad idea, and as far as I know, the first such product to offer this kind of feature.
McAfee VirusScan is available immediately for $34.95 on the company’s website, http://www.mcafee.com/.

Update: Documents To Go For Dana

By | November 24, 2011
 Further to my review of the excellent Dana keyboard, its makers AlphaSmart, Inc. have announced they plan to offer a wide-screen version of DataViz’s Documents To Go Professional as a bundled software option for new versions of Dana. Documents To Go enables Palm users to work with Microsoft Office documents, such as Word, Excel and PowerPoint.
 
 
I found the Dana an excellent alternative for writing in certain conditions when you just want to get away from your desk, your office, your family, your town. It’s not everyone’s cup of tea, but with tools like Documents To Go, the lines between laptop and Dana tend to blur.