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Supposedly Wide-Spread Email Worm Making Headlines: "Here You Have" email contains fake and malicious PDF or WMV links

Virus/Worm Summary:

About the Virus:

Late yesterday, various antivirus (AV) vendors began receiving reports of a new mass-mailing email worm, generally called VBMania, which arrives with various subjects including, “Here you have.” Today, others in the press have jumped on the bandwagon and published many shrill reports [ 1 / 2 / 3 ] that describe this worm as an outbreak and suggest it has flooded inboxes worldwide. While we don’t doubt that attackers have aggressively seeded this malicious email using spamming techniques (and likely a botnet), we haven’t yet seen the worm in our own inbox. There are reports of it affecting some well known companies. However, it doesn’t seem to be as wide-spread as the big worms of the past (Nimba, etc). In fact, most antivirus (AV) companies still only rate this worm as only a medium risk. While you should make yourself, and your users, aware of this new worm, it doesn’t offer reason for panic.

Unfortunately, the lack of coordination among AV vendors’ naming conventions makes it difficult to track these worms. While the media generally refers to this as the “Here you have” worm, AV vendors have given this worm a variety of names including:

For simplicity sake, we will refer to this worm as VBMania.

Distinguishing Characteristics

Despite the media hype surrounding this new worm, it doesn’t seem to use any new techniques that would allow it spread any more quickly than a typical email worm. In fact it seems to call back to older malicious email techniques, some saying it shares similarities with the older ILoveYou and Anna Kournikova worms from 2000 and 2001. We describe some of VBMania’s distinguishing characteristics below.

VBMania arrives as an email with the following Subject lines:

The body of the worm contains some text describing either a document or movie. It also includes a link to what appears to be a PDF document or WMV movie file. However, if you actually click the link, it attempts to get you to download a malicious .SCR screensaver file. An example of the malicious SCR file might include:

If you run the malicious .SCR file it:

VBMania doesn’t really use any tricks that you haven’t seen before. You should have no problems distinguishing this worm in your inbox, and avoiding it. However, attackers seem to have spammed this worm very aggressively. If one of your users does accidentally run its malicious file, they could cause a lot of damage to your network. Make sure to inform your users of this new email worm so they know to avoid it. However, you don’t need to panic over this new threat, despite what the media may suggest.

What you can do

For all XTM users:

If you manage a WatchGuard XTM appliance, it can protect your network in many ways:

For all XCS users:

If you manage a WatchGuard XCS appliance, it can protect your network in many ways:

References:

This alert was researched and written by Corey Nachreiner, CISSP.

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