By Andy TowlerPosted Tuesday 11th September 2007 15:05 GMT
> Typical examples of the message it sends include "really funny", "look what crazy photo Tiffany sent to me, looks cool" and "what ur friend name wich is in photo?"
So the only people who should be falling for it are people with friends who can't string a sentence together properly, and people who are generally disposed towards clicking links with "erotic" in the URL.
I received it from 2 Skype contacts - in both cases it would have been pretty out of character for them to write "wich is in photo" or to send me a URL to an erotic image - so I emailed them to ask if they'd sent me anything.
As always, if in doubt, don't click, and no damage done.
Having said that, if the Skype API lets this piece of code start chat sessions without authenticating itself, then a fix might be needed.
By Anonymous CowardPosted Tuesday 11th September 2007 17:47 GMT
What I don't understand is why the viewing of a picture requires the execution of a payload. If viewers didn't automatically execute commands within the image then a lot of the worms would never get spread. That won't happen though if the sales and marketing people have their way since people would never execute the add payloads.
By JosefPosted Tuesday 11th September 2007 20:14 GMT
We had one user infected today. She swore she had not clicked any links, just replied to a message (and I trust her here). Luckilly she had only limited rights to her machine so the trojan had to stay in her TEMP folder and was removed pretty easily. Still - the host file got modified - looks like it is world writable by default (?!).
By Steven WalkerPosted Tuesday 11th September 2007 21:41 GMT
"So the only people who should be falling for it are people with friends who can't string a sentence together properly, and people who are generally disposed towards clicking links with "erotic" in the URL."
Well that would include a significant proportion of people who comment on El Reg stories ... and the occasional contributor :)
By David WilkinsonPosted Tuesday 11th September 2007 23:16 GMT
I use spyware terminator, it will ask permission the first time a new program tries to make a change to important files or settings.
Like all security software its annoying. But once you tell it what programs are trusted to what things its great for alerting you to suspicious activity.
And like all the security software I use its free.
Of course if someone will clicked on a suspicious link, clicked to install software when they were expecting a picture, then they are probably doing to click OK to modify the host files.
voshkin's method can execute code by tricking the user into running an EXE instead of viewing a JPEG, but it is even possible to include executable code in a JPEG itself and execute it by buffer overflow when the user merely views the image.
By Anonymous CowardPosted Wednesday 12th September 2007 02:40 GMT
an even nastier exploitation is the red flag notification attached to the Skype icon. Clicking on this, which normally would be a message from a trusted caller, opens the infected .jpg without viewing what it actually is, NASTY!!! over to you Skype?
Comments on: Skype worm blows bubbles at victims
With friends like these #
By Andy Towler Posted Tuesday 11th September 2007 15:05 GMT
And yet again... #
By Jon Thompson Posted Tuesday 11th September 2007 15:27 GMT
Bad viewers #
By Anonymous Coward Posted Tuesday 11th September 2007 17:47 GMT
Spam filter funds... #
By Anonymous Coward Posted Tuesday 11th September 2007 18:05 GMT
If viewers didn't automatically execute commands #
By voshkin Posted Tuesday 11th September 2007 19:16 GMT
Not that simple.. #
By Josef Posted Tuesday 11th September 2007 20:14 GMT
With friends like these #
By Steven Walker Posted Tuesday 11th September 2007 21:41 GMT
Spyware Terminator #
By David Wilkinson Posted Tuesday 11th September 2007 23:16 GMT
Re: Automatic payload execution #
By ie Posted Tuesday 11th September 2007 23:46 GMT
no need to click on the .jpg #
By Anonymous Coward Posted Wednesday 12th September 2007 02:40 GMT