A security researcher at the
University of California
says the Storm Worm
could be coming to an end, based on his tracking data.
Brandon Enright told the
Toorcon hacker conference in
San Diego he had been following the Zhelatin Trojan's progress since July and
believes its effects have been significantly reduced.
"The size of the network has been falling pretty rapidly and pretty
consistently," Enright said.
The researcher pointed to
a concerted email
attack in July, when Storm is thought to have infected about 1.5 million
PCs.
Enright said that out of these machines, around 200,000 were accessible by
the Trojan writers at any time.
However, since July he said anti-virus vendors had worked hard to identify
affected machines and clean them up, including an important addition to the
Microsoft
Malicious Software Removal tool.
Those efforts had reduced the Storm network to just 160,000 PCs, with 20,000
infected computers available for use by the Trojan, Enright said.
His research was backed up by September's figures from security company
Kaspersky.
Despite a rapid increase in August, where Kaspersky said reports put the
botnet created by the worm at two million infected computers, the following
month was very quiet.
"September was remarkably calm from this point of view," a Kaspersky
spokesman said.
"Either the numbers were erroneous, or the authors of Zhelatin have decided
to take a break until law enforcement agencies around the world direct their
attention elsewhere."
The Trojan was named Storm Worm as it originally used a spam email touting
news about high winds in Europe to spread to users.
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