Mydoom



         


Mydoom, also known as Novarg, Mimail.R and Shimgapi, is a computer worm affecting Microsoft Windows. It was first sighted on January 26, 2004. It became the fastest spreading email worm ever (as of January 2004), exceeding previous records set by the Sobig worm.

Mydoom appears to have been commissioned by e-mail spammers so as to send junk e-mail through infected computers. The worm contains the text message "andy; I'm just doing my job, nothing personal, sorry," leading many to believe that the worm's creator was paid to create it. Several security firms have published their belief that the worm originated from a professional underground programmer in Russia. The actual author of the worm is unknown.

Early coverage held that the sole purpose of the worm was to perpetrate a distributed denial-of-service attack against SCO Group. 25% of Mydoom.A-infected hosts targeted www.sco.com with a flood of traffic. Trade press conjecture, spurred on by SCO Group's own claims, held that this meant the worm was created by a Linux or open source supporter in retaliation for SCO Group's controversial legal actions and public statements against Linux. This theory has, however, been rejected by security researchers.

Initial analyses of Mydoom suggested that it was a variant of the Mimail worm — hence the alternate name Mimail.R — prompting speculation that the same persons were responsible for both worms. Later analyses were less conclusive as to the link between the two worms.

Mydoom was named by Craig Schmugar, an employee of computer security firm McAfee and one of the earliest discoverers of the worm. Schmugar chose the name after noticing the text "mydom" within a line of the program's code. He noted: "It was evident early on that this would be very big. I thought having 'doom' in the name would be appropriate."

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Technical overview

Mydoom is primarily transmitted via e-mail, appearing as a transmission error, with subject lines including "Error," "Mail Delivery System," "Test" or "Mail Transaction Failed" in different languages, including English and French. The mail contains an attachment that, if executed, resends the worm to email addresses found in local files such as a user's address book. It also copies itself to the "shared folder" of peer-to-peer file-sharing application KaZaA in an attempt to spread that way.

Mydoom avoids targeting e-mail addresses at certain universities, such as Rutgers, MIT, Stanford and UC Berkeley, as well as certain companies such as Microsoft and Symantec. Some early reports claimed the worm avoids all .edu addresses, but this is not the case.

The original version, Mydoom.A, is described as carrying two payloads:

A second version, Mydoom.B, as well as carrying the original payloads, also targets the Microsoft website and blocks HTTP access to Microsoft sites and popular online antivirus sites, thus blocking virus removal tools or updates to antivirus software. The smaller number of copies of this version in circulation meant that Microsoft's servers suffered few ill effects.

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Timeline

Although Mydoom's denial of service attack was scheduled to begin on 1 February 2004, SCO Group's website goes offline briefly in the hours after the worm is first released. It is unclear whether Mydoom was responsible for this. SCO Group's site was allegedly the target of several distributed denial of service attacks in 2003 that were unrelated to computer viruses.
The spread of MyDoom peaks; computer security companies report that Mydoom is responsible for roughly one in five e-mail messages at this time.
Computer security firm mi2g names Mydoom the worst malware ever, having caused nearly $40 billion in economic damage.
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See also

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