MyDoom raced onto the Internet on Monday, quickly clogging e-mail servers, as it propagated itself with millions of messages laden with malicious software code. The virus arrived with one of several different random subject lines, such as "Mail Delivery System," "Test" or "Mail Transaction Failed."
Once the virus infects a Windows-running PC, it installs a program that allows the computer to be controlled remotely. The program primes the PC to send data to the SCO Group's Web server, starting Sunday. SCO quickly offered $250,000 for information leading to the arrest and conviction of the person or group responsible for creating MyDoom virus.
The virus also copies itself to the Kazaa download directory on PCs, on which the file-sharing program is loaded. The virus camouflages with one of seven file names: Winamp5, icq2004-final, Activation_Crack, Strip-gril-2.0bdcom_patches, RootkitXP, Officecrack and Nuke2004.
An offshoot of MyDoom soon emerged, aiming data attacks at Microsoft's Web site and interfering with an infected PC's ability to access downloadable security-software updates. Microsoft followed SCO's lead and announced a $250,000 reward of its own
Two days after the attacks began, the U.S. Department of Homeland Security announced an e-mail alert system aimed at informing two groups of citizens--technical experts and the average home user--of potential online threats. The system, known as the National Cyber Alert System, will be maintained and administered by the U.S. national computer emergency response team, or US-CERT, but it relies on the expertise of many security companies.
Microsoft will release a software update to Internet Explorer and Windows Explorer designed to protect Web surfers from being lured to Web sites that might contain malicious code. In December, a Danish security firm alerted the security community to an IE bug that would let hackers display false Web addresses. This week, the company posted details of an alleged flaw that could let Web surfers be tricked into downloading malicious files from counterfeit sites reached via such fake addresses.
However, Microsoft will delay making any modifications to Windows and Internet Explorer Web browser, based on the Eolas patent case. Microsoft said it will hold off on implementing previously announced changes until its efforts to appeal the suit or invalidate the patent are settled.
Cooking spam
The battle to rid the world's in-boxes of spam has got itself a heavyweight champion--Bill Gates--making an even more heavyweight promise: an end to the e-mail plague within two years. Gates said he could crack spam by 2006, adding that with the help of some canny tech measures, spammers would be hit where it hurts--in their fat wads of Viagra-inspired cash.
The Federal Trade Commission has some ideas of its own on how to get rid of unsolicited e-mail. The commission proposed a mandatory tag for commercial e-mail that contains pornographic material--a stipulation of the new federal antispam law enacted this month.
The FTC also has some advice for network administrators: Secure your servers. The FTC and its counterparts in 26 other nations began sending e-mail to tens of thousands of people believed to be responsible for open relays and open proxies that spammers use as broadcast points for massive amounts of junk mail.
Looking at Longhorn
As Microsoft readies Longhorn--the next version of Windows--the company wants to wean developers and independent software vendors off older Windows programming models. Microsoft software architect Don Box said the company will not invest much more in Component Object Model and Distributed Compound Object Model--Microsoft's mechanisms for sharing objects between programs.
Box's boss--Microsoft chief software architect Bill Gates--took a swipe at rival operating systems as he reiterated the importance of security for Windows and in particular for the upcoming Longhorn. Gates stressed the importance of security for his company's products but said companies such as SCO were courting danger by sitting back.
Besides Longhorn, Microsoft plans to start testing a new version of its Windows XP Media Center edition, a customized OS designed for entertainment-oriented PCs. The software, code-named Symphony, is likely to make its way later this year onto new entertainment-oriented PCs.
Also of note
Responding to sharp criticism from legislators, a group of file-swapping companies told Congress that they have no ability to block copyrighted files or child pornography from their networks...This year's cap of 65,000 H-1B guest-worker visas is already close to being reached, as employers snap up the controversial visas...Intel plans to demonstrate a 64-bit revamp of its Xeon and Pentium processors in mid-February--an endorsement of a major rival's strategy and a troubling development for Intel's Itanium chip...Following in the footsteps of rivals, Oracle is launching a Web services-based effort to make its business management applications more compatible with other business systems...The server market surged in 2003, with shipments growing 25 percent in the last quarter.

