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To: Venditâ„¢ who wrote (9154)4/2/1999 12:30:00 PM
From: Jenne  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 41369
 
A New Jersey Man Is Arrested
And Charged as Melissa's Creator

An INTERACTIVE JOURNAL News Roundup

A man has been arrested and charged with originating the e-mail
virus known as Melissa, the New Jersey attorney general's office
announced Friday.

David L. Smith, 30, of Aberdeen, was arrested Thursday night at
his brother's house in Eatontown, N.J., said Rita Malley, a
spokeswoman for Attorney General Peter Verniero.

Mr. Smith originated the virus, which caused worldwide e-mail
disruption earlier this week, from his apartment in Aberdeen, Ms.
Malley said.

Ms. Malley said Mr. Smith was snared with the help of America
Online Inc. technicians and a computer task force composed of
federal and state agents.

Mr. Smith, who Ms. Malley described as a "computer guy," is
being held at the Monmouth County Jail. Ms. Malley couldn't
immediately say where Mr. Smith works, but said that the virus
"originated at his apartment in Aberdeen, New Jersey."

No information was immediately available as to what charges Mr.
Smith faces.

The Melissa virus spread around the world last Friday and over
the weekend, apparently having been uploaded to the Internet
newsgroup alt.sex from a stolen America Online account.

It affected personal computers that have Microsoft Corp.'s Word
software and its mail programs, Outlook or Outlook Express.
Once activated by unwary users, the virus causes each PC to tap
into the mail program's address list and send 50 copies of a
message containing a list of pornographic Web sites to e-mail
addresses on that list, generating a flood of traffic that brought
many corporate e-mail systems to a halt last Friday.

The virus crafted a subject line for the e-mail that begins with
"Important message from" followed by the name of the person
who unwittingly passed on the message. By using names in the
address book and sending a message with an innocuous subject
line, Melissa appeared to be a real message coming from a
person most likely known to the recipient. The virus isn't activated
unless users call up a Word file, named "list.doc," that is attached
to the mail message.

Melissa appeared to cause no direct damage to infected PCs,
but the incident demonstrated the continued vulnerability of
networked computer systems to rogue software, and how quickly
such programs can move along the global Internet.

A global hunt for the programmer responsible began soon after
the virus began winging its way around the world. Computer
researchers were soon hard at work tracing Melissa's path and
poring over the style of coding used by its author. Some of the
earliest evidence in the hunt, ironically, came from an
identification number generated by some versions of Word -- a
feature that was the subject of harsh scrutiny from privacy
advocates after its existence was brought to light last month.

The identification numbers, called global unique identifiers, or
GUIDs, are generated by Word 97 and associated with specific
documents. Microsoft said the numbers, also found in other
companies' software, are generated for such purposes as
tracking links between Web documents with changed file names.
Microsoft now has distributed software tools that remove GUIDs
from existing documents and can stop Word 97 from generating
them in the future.

The GUIDs only created circumstantial evidence, however.
Though only one number is generated for each data file or Word
document, sometimes virus creators work from someone else's
file rather than creating a new one. It is also possible for clever
programmers to change a GUID to cast suspicion on a machine
other than their own, computer experts said.

There is ample reason for virus authors to cloak their identity:
Knowingly transmitting a computer virus is a federal crime
punishable by as much as 10 years in prison, depending on the
amount of damage created.

Another danger with viruses is the inevitable copycat strains that
pop up. Antivirus-software makers were quick to discover
variants of Melissa that used different subject lines or documents
from different Microsoft programs.