Posted on 01/27/2004 1:10:08 PM PST by HAL9000
SCO Offers Reward for Arrest and Conviction of Mydoom Virus Author
SCO Offers Monetary Reward for Arrest and Conviction of Perpetrator of Damaging Mydoom Virus
LINDON, Utah, Jan. 27 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ -- The SCO Group, Inc. , the owner of the UNIX® operating system and a leading provider of UNIX-based solutions, today confirmed that it is experiencing a distributed Denial-of-Service attack. SCO announced that it is offering a reward of up to a total of $250,000 for information leading to the arrest and conviction of the individual or individuals responsible for creating the Mydoom virus.
"During the past ten months SCO has been the target of several DDOS attacks," said Darl McBride, president and CEO, The SCO Group, Inc. "This one is different and much more troubling, since it harms not just our company, but also damages the systems and productivity of a large number of other companies and organizations around the world. The perpetrator of this virus is attacking SCO, but hurting many others at the same time. We do not know the origins or reasons for this attack, although we have our suspicions. This is criminal activity and it must be stopped. To this end, SCO is offering a total of $250,000 reward for information leading to the arrest and conviction of those responsible for this crime."
SCO is also working with U.S. law enforcement authorities including the U.S. Secret Service and Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) to determine the identity of the individual(s) involved. Anyone with this information may contact their local FBI office.
The Mydoom worm, also known as Novarg, is a mass-mailing worm that arrives as an attachment with the file extension .bat, .cmd, .exe, .pif, .scr, or .zip. When a user opens the attachment their computer becomes infected and uses their computer with the intention of connecting to the www.sco.com Web site on February 1, 2004. Network security firms including Network Associates and Symantec have already issued software updates to combat this particular worm.
Glad to hear it. And this is the perfect chance for Linux supporters to prove that other Linux users weren't behind this, and let SCO pay them for it as well, although I seriously doubt that is what will ultimately happen.
I am one of them, my e-mail is completely shut down.
Had a virus last year and was frantic until I got it resolved. OF course, knowing nothing about the computer I had to call a technician and it cost a few hundred dollars to get it fixed..........
I have no use at all for hackers and virus senders......may they all rot in hell!
I am in the same boat, but usually I can follow the instructions given, not this time.
We are with cable, they are using Outlook Express, I hear Outlook has a reputation for freezing, when someone sneezes.
I am too tired to do anything more tonight, have been working on it all day.. and part of yesterday.
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