In mid-late
May, you might have noticed your inbox being inundated with emails in German.
These emails didn't actually contain a virus, but they were the direct result
of the Sober worm, and marked one of the first examples we've seen of
virus writers using their tools toward political ends.
As you likely already know, most virus outbreaks occur via
email attachments. When you open malicious attachments, your machine can become
infected. The most common of these viruses is the "worm", which then goes
through your system, looking for email addresses and sending itself onto people
you know.
One of the by-products of many of these worms is that they
leave a 'backdoor' open on your system, allowing the virus writers to access
your system remotely, without your permission. It is these backdoors that turn
machines into zombies (see our March article where we describe zombie
computers), and in May some right-wing (read neo-nazi) extremists began using
the backdoors of these infected systems to send out spam with links to
politically motivated websites.
While these emails themselves didn't contain a virus
attachment they just had harmless links to some pretty disturbing content
and most people we spoke to were just confused as to what it all meant it
serves to illustrate the ongoing risks of being infected with a virus your
machine becomes a zombie and also the concerning step where viruses go beyond
being an IT issue, and start to play a part in society broadly through
political or other means.
Our tip as always is to protect yourself from viruses (see
our story 'Avoiding Viruses' from this time two years ago for instructions and
advice) and dont be surprised to see virus writers taking advantage of their
tools to do more harm than spread racist propaganda it won't be long now
until a virus breaks a serious law, and if it is your computer doing the
damage, you're likely to be legally accountable.