Hunt for Code Red authors turns into witch hunt

Published: 14 August 2001 y., Tuesday
In the run-up to the Hackers at Large (HAL) conference in Holland last weekend, the German newswire DPA carried reports that "computer security experts" had identified the "Dutch hacker group 29A" as source of Code Red by means of "information from online forums". In fact, 29A are a largely Spanish group one of whose former members, Wintermute, wrote a DOS virus called RedCode, which has nothing to do with the Code Red worm. Mental Driller, a member of 29A, has sent an email out denying its involvement in the development of Code Red, which contained destructive code that his "research virus programming group" would not include in their viruses, which he claimed were designed to show up system vulnerabilities. We're not inclined to take statement from virus writers at face value but Mental Driller's statement is backed Frank Rieger, of respected white-hat hackers the Chaos Computer Club as well as antivirus experts. Graham Cluley, senior technology consultant at antivirus vendor Sophos, said Code Red was "unlikely" to have been written by 29A because the worm didn't fit with their "style or method of attack". 29A, Hexadecimal for 666, features in the source code of Code Red and this may have led to people jumping to conclusions about the involvement of the group in writing the worm, Cluley suggested. Frank Rieger, of Chaos Computer Club, said that erroneous reports that 29A were Dutch had caused stress for organisers of the HAL conference who feared that the DPA article would provide an excuse for the authorities to come down hard on them.
Šaltinis: theregister.co.uk
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

PC/E Retail Banking Solution Suite with new services

Wincor Nixdorf supports banks in networking their delivery channels and enables new customer services by continuously developing its ProClassic/Enterprise Retail Banking Solution Suite. more »

Wincor Nixdorf accompanies a branch’s entire lifecycle

From the opening of new branches to their operation and modernization – Wincor Nixdorf presents its end-to-end offer for a branch’s entire lifecycle and shows what state-of-the-art branch design can look like. more »

Visa to hold training series on PIN security, key management at ATMIA

Visa will hold its first one-day Key Management Training series in conjunction with ATMIA. more »

WINCOR: Economy, U.S. politics, state of banking are focal points of annual trade fair

The United States is at the center of many conversations in Europe these days. more »

Wincor Nixdorf presents the world’s first SEPA-compliant checkout

Wincor Nixdorf is moving toward the new European standard EPAS (Electronic Protocols Application Software), which is now available as part of the introduction of SEPA for integrating cashless payment solutions in checkouts. more »

Designing and implementing customer-specific solutions

Wincor Nixdorf expands Professional Services portfolio. more »

Wincor World 2009: Strengthening competiveness through innovation

Over the years, Wincor World has developed into a premier branch event. It is an important communications forum for the 40 partner companies participating in the event and provides an ideal platform for exhibiting more than 600 IT solutions and services. more »

Wincor Nixdorf offers banks and retailers complete transaction processing

The transfer and processing of transactions with debit and credit cards generates a high administration overhead for financial institutes and retail companies alike, and also requires a suitable IT infrastructure. more »

Cisco, Intel and Microsoft Lead Collaborative Effort

International Education Assessment Leaders PISA and TIMSS Endorse Project, Plan to Incorporate Key Findings into Next Versions of International Benchmarks more »