Sophos, a British anti-virus company, is getting worried about the new Mimail worm (W32/Mimail-A), a mass-mailing worm which first struck inthe United States on Friday 1st August. Sophos says it “has received many reports of Mimail infections and anticipates the worm could be one of
the biggest of 2003″.

The Mimail worm arrives in an email claiming to be from the network administrator. Cunningly, it can even spoof the domain name of the business’s email address. For instance, if the recipient’s email address is John.Smith@ABCLimited.com the email would appear to come from admin@ABCLimited.com.
The message suggests that the recipient’s email account will soon expire and urges them to read the attached information. The attachment, called
‘message.zip’, contains an HTML file which is not a message at all – it is a copy of the worm, which scours the user’s hard disk looking for email addresses for its next round of victims.
‘message.zip’, contains an HTML file which is not a message at all – it is a copy of the worm, which scours the user’s hard disk looking for email addresses for its next round of victims.
More information about the Mimail worm can be found at http://www.sophos.com/virusinfo/analyses/w32mimaila.html.
Are we all outlaws, or what? A 
Further to my 
Sophos reports that a British man has been cleared of storing child pornography on his computer after Trojans — malicious bits of code, a kind of virus — were found on his computer. The man had been arrested after 172 indecent pictures of children were found on his hard drive (the report doesn’t say how). A computer forensics consultant identified 11 Trojan horses on the man’s computer, capable of carrying out actions without the user’s knowledge or permission. The acquittal follows the case of another British man who was cleared in April under similar circumstances.
Sony, as usual, is developing its own version of something we thought everyone else had agreed on. This time it’s Bluetooth. The 