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To: Larry S. who wrote (39842)3/4/2004 2:09:53 PM
From: SIer formerly known as Joe B.  Respond to of 110652
 
Thank You

This is incredible...

Sandvine estimated that, on any given day, between 2 percent and 12 percent of traffic on service provider networks is malicious. Even on networks with good security, malicious traffic accounts for 5 percent of all data.

Worms nibble away at ISP profits
By Dinesh C. Sharma
CNET News.com
March 3, 2004, 11:22 AM PT
zdnet.com.com

Worms are proving to be both a financial and managerial headache for Internet service providers.
Dealing with worms that travel over their networks could cost North American ISPs as much as $245 million in 2004, according to a study released Wednesday by peer-to-peer management company Sandvine. For service providers worldwide, the overall expense could reach $370 million. The totals include the cost of tactical response teams, swamped customer support resources, higher transit costs, and likely customer churn due to a loss of positive brand image over time.

Sandvine estimated that, on any given day, between 2 percent and 12 percent of traffic on service provider networks is malicious. Even on networks with good security, malicious traffic accounts for 5 percent of all data.



In addition to dealing with event-related attacks triggered by worms like Slammer, Sobig and the recent MyDoom, ISPs have to contend with daily denial-of-service attacks and persistent low-level incursions from remnants of earlier worms still active on the PCs of residential subscribers.

All told, worms have become an operational preoccupation for network managers, in addition to being a drag on profits, Sandvine said.

"Worms exact a massive toll by forcing service providers to mobilize premium resources in order to quell attacks and protect the subscriber experience," Tom Donnelly, vice president of marketing and sales at Sandvine, said in a statement. "Uncovering the true costs and inefficiencies that worms impose on the broadband sector is crucial if we're going to identify appropriate solutions."



To: Larry S. who wrote (39842)3/4/2004 2:20:18 PM
From: SIer formerly known as Joe B.  Respond to of 110652
 
Worm Wars
Wed Mar 3, 3:00 PM ET
Gregg Keizer, TechWeb News
story.news.yahoo.com

The worm blitz that started last Friday and showed no signs of ceasing Wednesday stepped up a notch as security analysts probing the code of recent malware discovered an obscenity-laced dialog between battling hacker factions.

According to analysis done by several antivirus companies, including Central Command, Sophos, and Finnish-based F-Secure, profanity-plagued messages between the creators of the latest Netsky, Bagle, and MyDoom variations are embedded in the worms' code.

Inside Bagle.j, the eighth variant to debut since Friday, and which first showed up Tuesday, is text taunting Netsky. Within Bagle.k, a new variant that appeared Wednesday, is similar text, said Sophos. Netsky.f, another worm discovered Wednesday, sports a retort, according to analysis by F-Secure. Tucked inside its code is the line "Skynet AntiVirus--Bagle--you are a looser!!!"

Even the MyDoom worm family got into the act; within MyDoom.g--a close copy of the original MyDoom loosed on the Internet late Tuesday--is an attack on Netsky's creators.

Calling the back-and-forth the first major global "cyber war" between hackers, security firm Central Command noted that the person or persons responsible for each of the three worm families involved--Bagle, Netsky, and now MyDoom--are battling for control of a huge army of Windows computers that have been compromised by infections, which have opened ports and installed backdoor components on the systems.

"It appears to be a war over power and seniority among these authors," Steven Sundermeier, Central Command's VP of products and services, said in a statement.

Other security firms, including Sophos, have used the word "war" to define what's going on. "Clearly the author of the Bagle worms is unimpressed that Netsky is stealing some of the limelight and most of the headlines," said Graham Cluley, a senior technology consultant for the U.K.-based Sophos.

Part of the motivation for the name calling may be the fact that some editions of Netsky, particularly Netsky.d, seek out and destroy some editions of the Bagle worm it finds on infected systems.

The ultimate losers of any hacker catfight are users, said Vincent Gullotto, VP of McAfee's Avert virus research team. "It's the end user, it's the Internet that suffers," he said. While some mail servers have been temporarily clogged, the Web as a whole hasn't been affected by any performance degradation with the millions of worm-laden messages shunting back and forth. But both business users and consumer can have fits trying to stay updated against such fast-developing, high-volume threats.

"In my seven years, I've seen this back-and-forth once or twice or three times, but nothing to this extent," said Gullotto. "There's new variant after new variant, two and three times a day in some cases."

In the last 24 hours, a quartet of new worms or variations on older editions have been spotted by McAfee, said Gullotto, including MyDoom.g, Netsky.f, Bagle.k, and Hiton. McAfee ranks them all as a "low" threat, while rival Symantec tagged all four with a "2" in its 1-to-5 scale.

The most persistent, and prevalent, of the worms released since Friday remains Netsky.d, which first appeared Monday.

MessageLabs, a U.K.-based firm that filters mail for enterprise customers worldwide, said Wednesday that Netsky.d has recently surged in its spread, and now accounts for one in every 19 E-mails.

"Although Netsky.d was fairly quiet in the first 24 and 48 hours--a slow burner, so to speak--we've seen a jump in the last 12 hours," said Natasha Staley, an information security analyst with MessageLabs.

Of the more than 1.5 million copies of the worm that MessageLabs has intercepted since Monday, said Staley, 700,000 were nabbed in a half-day.

"At the moment, Netsky.d isn't that far off MyDoom.a in its prevalence," said Staley, noting that at its peak, MyDoom.a accounted for one in every 12 E-mails that reached her company's filters.