Koliko ste danas dobili mejlova sa virusom

Discussion in 'Internet provideri, umrežavanje i web servisi' started by GV, Nov 22, 2005.

  1. GV

    GV Komšija

    Ja 5, a rekoše da su na bihnetu stavili nekakve antiviruse, vatrozidove, antispamove i ostale karafeke. Nod32 sve ih je pohvatao pa mi recite da nevalja. Ubuduće mejlove otvaram samo direktno na serveru!
     
  2. kamikaza

    kamikaza Aktivista

    ja nisam nijedan dobio :D :arrow:
     
  3. Esh

    Esh HWB

    cini mi se da je neko poslao lijepu listu virusa @ bih.net.ba domen.. doslo je mnogima :)
     
  4. [tota]

    [tota] Aktivista

    Hehe ja mislim da sam dobio zadnji put virus, mislim da je to bio Sasser ili je Blaster ;)
    Jedini put kad sam spusio virus ali na srecu nije bilo stete.
    Ne znam ali cini se da sam ja imao srece sa virusima.
     
  5. Esh

    Esh HWB

    ma ne radi se ovdje o zarazavanju, vec o cistom dolasku spam mailova koji u svom attachmentu sadrze virus. sad naravno, ako hoces biti laf pa to sve pokrenut ;)
     
  6. ming

    ming Veteran foruma

    Gmail i nema problema.
     
  7. kamikaza

    kamikaza Aktivista



    upravo: :wink:
    vec duze vrijeme ne koristim Bih.net.mail 8)
     
  8. Qler

    Qler Veteran foruma

    ja od septembra prosle godine na gmail-u, jos avast, pa firefox, pa ZA, ja i zaboravio sta je virus :D

    nekad kad trazim neke fajlove, koji se ne spominju na forumu, :D mi izleti avast, samo delete, i voz' misko :D
     
  9. GV

    GV Komšija

    Danas sam našao još dva ali sam ih izbrisao direktno na severu, strašni momci ovi na bihnetu
     
  10. n1dal

    n1dal Aktivista

    Hwala Bogu nemam ni jedan virus...a posebno one koji dolaze na mail.

    Bas me cudi...obicno je najbolja zastita upravo kod ISPa,ali desava se izgleda :D
     
  11. NeTRa1der

    NeTRa1der Komšija

    ne pamtim kad sam zadnji put fasovao virus, trojanac ili sl....milsim da je to bio CIH95 :lol:

    korisitm g-mail i yahoo! vec pravo dugo, i nisam imao problema sa takvim stvarima...
     
  12. monK

    monK Komšija

    http://news.com.com/Latest+Sober+threat ... =nefd.lede

    Latest Sober threatens e-mail gateways
    By Munir Kotadia
    Special to CNET News.com
    Published: November 23, 2005, 10:02 AM PST
    Tell us what you think about this storyTalkBack E-mail this story to a friendE-mail View this story formatted for printingPrint See links from elsewhere to this story (TrackBacks/Pingbacks)TrackBack

    The latest Sober worm, first spotted over the weekend, has generated the vast majority of virus-laden e-mail traffic in the past 24 hours and could cause problems for corporate e-mail gateways, security companies said.

    This variant of Sober generates e-mails that purport to be from the CIA or FBI. These messages tell the recipient they have been looking at illegal Web sites and should answer some questions in the e-mail's attachment. If the attachment is opened, the computer is infected, and the virus sends copies of itself to any e-mail addresses found on the hard drive.

    Allan Bell, the marketing director at McAfee Australia, said that over the past 24 hours more than 90 percent of all virus laden e-mails monitored by its partner Postini contained a copy of Sober.

    "(Sober) was generating around 15 million out of 16.8 million (virus-infected e-mails), so about 90 percent of the traffic is this particular virus," Bell said.

    Bell called the virus "prolific," saying it is capable of generating large volumes of traffic. That flood could slow or even overload many e-mail gateways, in a way that resembles a denial-of-service attack, which attempts to overwhelm a targeted system with excess data requests.

    "When they generate a lot of traffic, they themselves become a bit of a denial-of-service (attack), because your mail gateway needs to process, identify and then block (them). Just processing that stuff can slow everything down and stop good e-mails," Bell said.

    British antivirus software maker Sophos said the virus is slightly less widespread than McAfee claims, but admits its effect has been significant. According to Sophos's data, Sober now accounts for more than 65 percent of all virus traffic. That figure has climbed from 35 percent when the company first issued its alert, and makes the Sober by far the most prevalent virus.

    Graham Cluley, the senior technology consultant at Sophos said that the virus's clever social engineering had helped it become so widespread: "Every law-abiding citizen wants to help the police with their enquiries, and some will panic that they might be being falsely accused of visiting illegal Web sites and want click on the unsolicited e-mail attachment".
    In other news:

    McAfee this morning raised the threat level of Sober to "medium," based on the amount of e-mail traffic it has generated. Other security companies have also raised the alert for the new Sober worm variant.

    F-Secure has rated it a Radar Level 1 Alert, which is the highest alert on its three-step rating system. The Finland-based company said on its Web site that "several millions of infected e-mails have been seen by Internet operators over the last hours."

    Symantec rates it a "level 3" threat, with level 5 being the most severe. In a statement Wednesday, the company said it has detected more than 1,600 potential threats from among its corporate customers, and over 300 from consumers, since Nov. 19.

    Trend Micro, similarly, has issued a "medium" alert.

    While the worm variant is named differently by the security vendors, the Common Malware Enumeration system, launched last month, labels the new threat CME-681.