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Resend: Beware of Melissa .. (In Plain Text Format)

  • 1.  Resend: Beware of Melissa .. (In Plain Text Format)

    Posted 04-02-1999 08:33
    Dear All,

    It appears that recently there are viruses that are spread through email
    ATTACHMENTS in MS Word or Excel. These viruses (Melissa and Papa) are
    activated when you open the attachment, and send 50 emails to dozens of
    peoples listed in your address book, which eventually can bog down your
    server. The effect of these viruses is the same as that caused by some of
    you who chain-forwarded the virus hoax.

    I'd maintained that any warning that a virus would be activated once you
    read a certain email is very likely a hoax. That's still true as until today
    I've known of no one being sent "Pen Pals" or "Good News" and having his/her
    hard-drive wiped out simply because he/she reads the email.

    Virus Hoaxes
    Please ignore any messages regarding these supposed "viruses" and do not
    pass on any messages about them. Passing on messages about these hoaxes only
    serves to further propagate them.

    3b Trojan (alias PKZIP Virus)
    AOL4Free Virus Hoax
    AOL Year 2000 Update Hoax
    Baby New Year Virus Hoax
    Bad Times Hoax
    Blue Mountain Virus Hoax
    BUDDYLST.ZIP
    BUDSAVER.EXE
    Budweiser Hoax
    Dear Friends Hoax
    Death69
    Deeyenda
    E-Flu
    FatCat Virus Hoax
    Free Money
    Get More Money Hoax
    Ghost
    Good Times
    Guts to Say Jesus Hoax
    Hacky Birthday Virus Hoax
    Hairy Palms Virus Hoax
    Irina
    Join the Crew
    Londhouse Virus Hoax
    Microsoft Virus Hoax
    Millenium Time Bomb
    Norton anti - virus v5 Hoax
    Penpal Greetings
    Red Alert
    Returned or Unable to Deliver
    Teletubbies
    Time Bomb
    Very Cool
    Win a Holiday
    World Domination Hoax
    Yellow Teletubbies

    News about Melissa & Papa Virus

    Melissa Virus Gets Traced To Its Source
    (03/30/99, 5:23 p.m. ET)
    By Amy K. Larsen, InformationWeek

    Melissa, the e-mail-borne virus carrying the header "Important Message," has
    been traced to its roots.

    Newsgroup-sniffing software from security vendor Network Associates
    discovered where the virus was first posted: at the alt.sex newsgroup. A
    search of the file spotted an origin time close to the time it was
    published on the newsgroup.

    Network Associates researchers at the vendor's Anti-Virus Emergency Response
    Team (AVERT) lab identified an AOL user with the moniker "Sky Roket" as the
    person who first posted the virus. The FBI is searching for this person.

    The Melissa virus, which sends 50 infected e-mail messages with a list of
    pornographic sites to recipients named in the end user's address book, first
    surfaced late Friday.

    Late Monday, the inevitable follow-on to the Melissa virus made its first
    appearance. Named Papa, this new Excel virus works in a similar way to the
    Melissa bug. Papa arrives via e-mail, claiming to be sent by "all.net" or
    "Fred Cohen" in the end user's inbox, and then replicates, mailing itself to
    the first 60 users in the address book.

    Experts said the viruses have different authors, but similar patterns, which
    should make it easier to come up with an antidote for a copycat bug.

    Sal Viveros, group marketing manager for antivirus products at Network
    Associates, said he estimates millions of computers have been infected by
    the original Melissa virus.


    Anwar Hasim