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December 13, 2007

MSN Messenger Trojan Spreads Botnet

eWeek reports that a Trojan spreading over MSN Messenger, which poses as pictures, is actually a malicious IRC bot that also searches for VNCs.

The Trojan is an IRC bot that's spreading through MSN Messenger by sending itself in a .zip file with two names. One of the names includes the word "pics" as a double extension executable—a name generally used by scanners and digital cameras: for example, DSC00432.jpg.exe. The Trojan is also contained in a .zip file with the name "images" as a .pif executable—for example, IMG34814.pif.

The files are infiltrating new systems by using either known contacts from which the Trojan has harvested instant messaging names, as well as from the systems of unknown users.

The infection vector—an IM program—isn't new. But the Trojan is the first that eSafe has tracked that has tried to scan for VNC (Virtual Network Computing) instances, likely in order to multiply the botnet's number of connections.

[New MSN Messenger Trojan Spreading Quickly]

Posted in Tech News by #!/usr/bin/geek at 2007-12-13 00:31 ET (GMT-5)

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