I received a file named Book3_26.xls.pif in my mail. I suspect this to be a virus because of the way the filename is masked to show up as an excel sheet in default windows installs.
IMPORTANT: This was sent to me by someone who has my address in your addressbook. Anyone using windows, and having my address in your addressbook, please check your system.
The virus is probably harmless through mail because of a stupid problem. There's an extra = at the end of the base 64 encoded file, which means it cannot be decoded, at least not by standards compliant decoders. OE may still decode it. Don't know about NSMessenger. A simple inspection of the attachment tells you that. I extracted the file, and ran strings on it. It gave me this:
BFD: BFD internal error, aborting at coffcode.h line 763 in styp_to_sec_flags
BFD: Please report this bug.
This seems to be a problem with strings. (strings on Solaris works)
I then did a file on it and found it to be a Win32 executable (surprise!).
I then did a less on the file to see what was in it.
I found a lot of things, including the following (edited to fit):
Content-Disposition: quoted-printable 8bit 7bit octet-stream plain mixed Content-Transfer-Encoding: ; charset= ; boundary=" Content-Type: application mixed _Outlook_Express_message_boundary Outlook Express MIME messages encoding and decoding X-Mailer: Microsoft Outlook Express X-MIMEOLE: Produced By Microsoft MimeOLE V5.50.4133.2400 MIME-Version: 1.0 date: Organization: Subject: To: From:
along with three letter abbreviations of days of the week and months of the year and a lot more. Specifically, there are a lot of references to Winsock.dll and common TCP/IP errors, but I have been unable to determine if it just uses the file or tries to replace it. I believe it may be the former, though its size (173KB) seems to suggest it does a lot more than just send email.
Towards the fourth quarter of the file, I found actual excel stuff.
Now, look at the header of the mail:
X-MIMEOLE: Produced By Microsoft MimeOLE V5.50.4133.2400 X-Mailer: Microsoft Outlook Express 5.50.4133.2400 Content-Type: multipart/mixed; boundary="----147B2E70_Outlook_Express_message_boundary" Content-Disposition: Multipart message
and the attachment headers:
------147B2E70_Outlook_Express_message_boundary Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1 Content-Transfer-Encoding: quoted-printable Content-Disposition: message text
Hi! How are you=3F
I send you this file in order to have your advice
See you later=2E Thanks
------147B2E70_Outlook_Express_message_boundary Content-Type: application/mixed; name=Book3_26.xls.pif Content-Transfer-Encoding: base64 Content-Disposition: attachment; filename=Book3_26.xls.pif
Also, the terminating message boundary is identical to the others, instead of having a trailing -- as specified in 822 (I think).
Looks pretty suspicious to me. I checked at Symantec, it's been recorded as the W32.Sircam.Worm, last updated this morning.
Check http://www.sarc.com/avcenter/venc/data/w32.sircam.worm@mm.html for more details.
Philip
On Tuesday 24 July 2001 13:08, Philip Tellis wrote:
I received a file named Book3_26.xls.pif in my mail. I suspect this to be a virus because of the way the filename is masked to show up as an excel sheet in default windows installs.
Recieved a mail with subject "ciol" from some Chen. Readable content was the same
Hi! How are you=3F
I send you this file in order to have your advice
See you later=2E Thanks
Simply deleted it.
On Tue, 24 Jul 2001, jtdyahoo wrote:
Recieved a mail with subject "ciol" from some Chen. Readable content was the same
Hi! How are you=3F
Ya, it's the same one. Chen is a student at National Tsing Hua University, Taiwan. The mail originated from his machine, but I am not entirely convinced that he knows about it.
Philip
--- Philip S Tellis philip.tellis@iname.com wrote:
On Tue, 24 Jul 2001, jtdyahoo wrote:
Recieved a mail with subject "ciol" from some
Chen.
Readable content was the same
Hi! How are you=3F
I got 3 mails from different account with similar messages! That got me suspicious.....
quasi
__________________________________________________ Do You Yahoo!? Make international calls for as low as $.04/minute with Yahoo! Messenger http://phonecard.yahoo.com/
Sometime today, Philip S Tellis wrote:
I received a file named Book3_26.xls.pif in my mail. I suspect this to be a virus because of the way the filename is
I got it too.
From rose@costra.com Tue Jul 24 22:27:49 2001
[snip] Received: from 213.42.47.211 (HELO costra.com) (213.42.47.211) by mta546.mail.yahoo.com with SMTP; 24 Jul 2001 08:18:18 -0700 (PDT) [snip] Subject: TANG ASSESSMENT REPORT - QTR - final report date: Tue, 24 Jul 2001 11:04:19 +0400 [snip] X-UID: 1380
[snip]
------3E1306A9_Outlook_Express_message_boundary Content-Type: application/mixed; name="TANG ASSESSMENT REPORT - QTR - final report.xls.bat" Content-Transfer-Encoding: base64 Content-Disposition: attachment; filename="TANG ASSESSMENT REPORT - QTR - final report.xls.bat"
[Attachment Here]
------3E1306A9_Outlook_Express_message_boundary
Manish