Microsoft deserves some blame for the rapidly spreading Web virus
Published:
20 August 2003 y., Wednesday
Microsoft deserves some blame for the rapidly spreading Web virus -- but so do network administrators, ISPs, small businesses, and individual PC users. Compared to the images of sweaty Gothamites trudging across the Brooklyn Bridge in 95-degree heat during the massive power blackout, the MS Blaster worm now seems like a walk in the park.
Still, the latest worm to clog corporate networks and kludge the Net wreaked plenty of havoc in its own right. Internet security companies estimated losses from both downtime and wasted manhours in the hundreds of millions of dollars for U.S. companies. And Blaster-infected machines significantly impacted the Internet. The stream of bogus requests generated by the worm slowed DNS (domain name system) servers that act as the phone directories of the Internet. Compromised computers jammed up networks ranging from BMW in Germany to the Maryland Motor Vehicles Dept.
. Like the Slammer and CodeRed worms before it, Blaster targeted computers running Microsoft Windows 2000 and Windows XP operating systems. The worm carries a small program designed to exploit a chink in Redmond's digital armor and insert a file deep into the operating system in the Windows registry system. The registry is a database where the most basic rules that govern how a Windows machine behaves are stored and categorized.
Once Blaster inhabits the registry, it causes computers to restart without warning and to spew out thousands of connection requests per minute, in search of other machines to infect. The sheer volume of traffic caused enough digital noise to bog down networks.
Šaltinis:
businessweek.com
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.
The most popular articles
Software company announced new structure_ of it_s business.
more »
The Poland Ministry of Infrastructure's target to increase by 350 percent the number of broadband Internet users by 2006
more »
search.lt presents newest links
more »
Nokia has secured a deal for the setting up of a GSM mobile telephone network in the south of Iraq
more »
Owner worried about negative impact on young son
more »
search.lt presents newest links
more »
While Linux lawsuits gobble up the IT community's mindshare, a lesser-known legal action is being fought seeking billions of dollars from five PC vendors
more »
UK police are contacting other forces worldwide in an attempt to close down websites with sexually violent content
more »
The Bush administration's proposed $60 billion IT spending plan for 2005 looks to deliver a "service-centered" government
more »
New security solution prevents unauthorized withdrawals
more »
GfK consumer panel data to be available to CMplus users via standard interface
more »