Quantcast

Trojan Poses as Windows XP Update

N8 v2.0

Not the sharpest tool in the shed
Oct 18, 2002
11,003
149
The Cleft of Venus
Trojan Poses as Windows XP Update - File arrives in an attachment purported to be from Microsoft.
PCWorld ^ | Friday, January 09, 2004 | Paul Roberts, IDG News Service

Security companies are warning Internet users about a new Trojan horse program spreading via spam e-mail and masquerading as a Windows XP software update from Microsoft.

The program, known as "Xombe" or "Dloader-L," arrives as an executable attachment in spam e-mail messages purporting to come from windowsupdate@microsoft.com and installs itself on victim's computers when users open the attachment.

Once installed, Xombe connects to a Web site, then downloads and installs another program, called Mssvc-A, which is a Trojan horse program that conscripts victim computers in distributed denial of service attacks against Web pages, according to antivirus company Sophos.

Low Risk
Xombe is considered a low risk by most antivirus companies, including Sophos, Computer Associates International, and Symantec. The program is not a worm or virus and cannot make copies of itself. Instead, it is distributed using spam e-mail messages.

Those messages read, in part, "Window [sic] Update has determined that you are running a beta version of Windows XP Service Pack 2 (SP1). To help improve the stability of your computer, Microsoft recommends that you remove the beta version of Windows XP SP1."

Recipients are told to "run the file winxp_sp1.exe in attach [sic] and make sure to restart your PC after installation," according to CA, Sophos, and others.

Sophos says it has received several reports of the Xombe Trojan program from customers.

Updates Available
Antivirus companies are offering updated virus definitions to spot Xombe and are providing instructions on removing Trojan programs from infected computers.

Microsoft frequently distributes security bulletins using e-mail, but never includes software updates as attachments, according to the company's Web site.

Most Microsoft software updates are made available through the Windows Update, Microsoft Office Update, or the Microsoft Download Center, the company says.