Microsoft offers $250k bounty for Downadup arrest

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Microsoft on Thursday said it is offering a $250,000 reward for information that leads to the arrest and conviction of whoever is responsible for creating the Conficker internet worm that has infected millions of PCs.

Microsoft said it is offering the reward because the worm constitutes a "criminal attack" and offering compensation should hasten prosecution. Residents of any country are eligible for the reward and should contact their international law-enforcement authorities, the company said in a statement.

Microsoft also announced that it has partnered with security companies, domain-name providers and others on a co-ordinated global response to the worm, also known as Downadup. Participating are: the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (Icann), VeriSign, NeuStar, CNNIC, Afilias, Public Internet Registry, Global Domains International, M1D Global, AOL, Symantec, F-Secure, ISC, Georgia Tech, the Shadowserver Foundation, Arbor Networks and Support Intelligence.

The worm, which has been around since last year, spreads through a hole in Windows systems, exploiting a vulnerability that Microsoft patched in October.

It also spreads via removable storage devices such as USB drives, and network shares by guessing passwords and usernames, which is "causing it to spread like wild fire in the enterprise", Jose Nazario, manager of security research for Arbor Networks, wrote on a company blog.

Coalition members have been trying to thwart the efforts of Conficker by pre-registering and locking up the domain names being used by the worm to distribute updates.

"The worm seeks to update itself by using a long list of pseudo-randomly generated domain names to contact over HTTP and then grab new code," Nazario wrote. "The algorithm for this domain-name generation scheme has been cracked (by F-Secure and others) and has been used to pre-compute the names for pre-registration to prevent hostile parties from using this update feature. This has been facilitated — greatly facilitated — by ICANN, TLD operators and various registrars working together with Microsoft and others to identify the names and grab the ones they need to. These records can then be pointed at sinkholes to discover Conficker-infected hosts checking in."

Over the past five days, Symantec has observed an average of 453,436 IP addresses infected per day with W32.Downadup.A and 1.7 million IP addresses infected per day with W32.Downadup.B, the company said in a blog posting.

"W32.Downadup is the first successful worm to target a vulnerability in a remote service since W32.Sasser in 2004, and in doing so it has shown that the internet is still a successful breeding ground for worms," Symantec said.

Infected machines, of which there could be as many as 12 million according to an estimate by Arbor Networks, could be used to launch distributed denial-of-service attacks on websites or seed a new worm, according to Symantec.

 

Talkback

Microsoft is responsible for the "swiss cheese" OS, and by forcing the user to buy it when a new computer is purchased, they are responsible for the spreading of the worm.

ator1940 13 February, 2009 18:27
Reply

Technically they sell a broken product. Once you have purchased your pc like it or not, you are forced to have a windows platform. Once you use it, if you do not buy yet more software to protect it, then it WILL become infected and put you and your data at risk.

Why are they not pulled for selling defective goods, which is what they are technically doing.

1000030281 15 February, 2009 21:45
Reply

i dont think it is microsofts fault as windows are good but with many holes which wouldent be a problem exept for the bastards out there who want to ruin it for everyone elts

robertk91193 21 February, 2009 12:49
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