Virus Exploits 'Excel' Security Hole to Infect Macs, PCs

Versions of Excel included in Office 2000, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2007, and 2008 on the PC and Mac are vulnerable to an attack able to be hidden in .XLS files. The attack has been called Trojan.Mdropper.AC and has been found on a few infected computers, primarily in Japan. For infection to happen, users would have to manually open the corrupt Excel file, either as an attachment on an e-mail or downloaded from the Internet. Once the corrupt file is run, the attackers who distributed the files could take control of the user's machine, stealing passwords or using it for whatever purpose they like. Anti-virus software maker Symantec at least is now scanning for these files, and Microsoft is working on a fix, but it remains to be seen when it will be released. [From: CNET News]
Top Eight Online Hoaxes
Everything Must Go
A farmer's house was cleaned out out after Craigslist ads said that all his possessions were being offered up for free. The man lost thousands of dollars worth of his stuff, and, unfortunately, this isn't the only incident of its kind. Last year, a woman's niece posted a similar ad, which led to people stripping everything from the aunt's empty apartment, including light fixtures. And recently, someone tried the same thing on a Massachusetts family, but they happened to be home when the gatherers arrived.
Photoshopping Dupes America
In 2000, a photo of a giant cat named Snowball was forwarded around the Internet and posted on many Web sites. The accompanying story was that a man had an 87-pound cat that was born to a mother that lived near a nuclear lab. The story spread so far that it was discussed on The Tonight Show with Jay Leno and Good Morning America. Unfortunately, it was just computer-manipulated image made by Cordell Hauglie, the man in the picture, yet people still haven't realized that you can't believe everything you see on the Web.
Stick To Match.com, People!
Getting sexy messages from somebody you don't know should set off some warning bells, but apparently there will always be people, mostly men, who believe they're about to score big. There are loads of tales like this, including a man who showed up naked at a house in New Zealand after misleading text messages and a Saudi Arabian who was robbed by teenagers when he showed up for a good time. Seriously, if it's too good to be true, it probably is.
Still Too Good to Be True
What's better than meeting someone online for love? Getting paid to do it, which is how an Australian farmer found himself kidnapped in . Several men pretended to be a woman, enticing Des Gregor, 53, to come to to get married and receive $85,000 in gold as dowry. When he got there, he was taken hostage and threatened with having his limbs hacked off unless he paid them the same amount. Fortunately, police duped the kidnappers and Gregor was safe. Gregor learned his lesson, apparently – "Just be careful - make sure you check everything out 100 per cent," he said.
Watch Out For Those Cameras
With the amount of people embarrassed or worse by leaked photos and videos of bad behavior online, it's no wonder that they'd be used for blackmail. This is exactly what happened to a 75-year-old Amish widower after he slept with a prostitute. The woman and her boyfriend extorted $67,000 from the man, saying there was a camera installed in his bedroom and that photos of the trysts would go online. Fortunately, the pair and two accomplices were arrested. So much for the Amish being behind in technology.
High Salary, Low Discretion
Seeing a job posting that promises thousands of dollars for at-home work will most likely get a lot of applicants and a lot of non-believers. Still, almost 80 people, including lawyers, were allegedly hired to work for a financial company doing research and all sorts of projects for $14,000 a month. They had conference calls, corporate e-mail addresses, contracts, and direct deposit forms, but after they didn't get paid for a few weeks, they realized it was all fake. There was no such company, the owner disappeared, and nobody knows what happened. So beware – if that job listing sounds amazing, do your research before you end up duped.
Scamming the Scammers
You've probably heard about or even received an e-mail about getting funds from or another African country if you send them a small sum. This is called 419 fraud, and rather than sit idly by, Michael Berry founded 419eater.com as a way to get revenge. The site encouraged people to bait the scammers, often to get the Nigerians to take pictures holding up offensive signs in English. Some users were successful in getting cash sent to them, although this was discouraged. Either way, it's good to know that anyone can be had, even the perpetrators.
Times Gets Owned in Joke Article
The phenomenon of Rickrolling has become so popular that even the New York Times covered it. Unfortunately for that respected paper, the coverage of the story found it getting getting duped by a Youtube video made by a student at Eastern Washington University . The article talked about a video that showed the student interrupting a timeout at a women's basketball game and somehow playing the song over the PA system. Unfortunately, this never happened and the video was a fake. So, an article on a prank ends up getting pranked too. Is there no end to this madness?
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Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
Unseelie said 2:15PM on 2-25-2009
The person who wrote the title should have read the article... it's NOT a virus, it's a trojan.
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RAY said 11:20AM on 2-26-2009
God I love technology. It provides more jobs for geeks while make the average person miserable. Screw the internet millionaires and their geek friends. They will be the final stroke in destroying this planet.
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Ray said 11:38AM on 2-26-2009
I am retired and work in a small business part time. Every day we have people coming in with the crap they bought on Craigslist, EBay and other on-line selling sites and demanding money back, free repairs for their crappy knockoff products and blameing our store for their stupidity. On-Line retail business will add to the decline of the American dream. P.S. They are also beating the states out of the sales and income taxes they don't pay. The new government should go after and regulate all on-line businesses and make them pay and go to jail for their scamming. Screw all on-line scamming thieves.
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Hard2SwaiioW8 said 12:27PM on 2-26-2009
Aol has now switched to Bebo, and in the process alienated many of it's users. For people who used Aol's profiles this basically means that they've lost pictures, musing's, music, ect. permanently. Skins and tags that took time to build are gone, music sites that were built taking time are gone.
Many people are upset with this change, not only did Aol erase profiles but they erased personalized, one of a kind pieces of art.
Aol gives its users no way to voice their opinions, Aol did away with its suggestions e-mails months ago. The only means of letting them know how you feel is to use the live chat help or call them... both of which get you a person that continually says how sorry they are for any inconvienience but theres nothing they can do.
Is anyone besides me upset with the way Aol has treated it's customers?
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Will said 12:50PM on 2-26-2009
Internet based businesses are no different than the Sears and Roebuck Catalog when it first came out. I worked for Sears in the Catalog division and now for an Internet Distributor. Walmart is more of a threat to small business than the Internet.Trojans and Viruses are going to be a part of life for the future, nothing is un hackable.
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John said 12:50PM on 2-26-2009
This title and content of this article is misleading when it suggests the Mac is vulnerable to attack. This trojan cannot attack Macs. If you read the original article:
"Affected software includes Microsoft Office 2000, 2002, 2003, and 2007 and Microsoft Office 2004 and 2008 for Mac."
but then:
"The risk is low and there have been few infections, Symantec said in an advisory. It lists Windows Vista and XP as affected systems."
In other words, this is a Microsoft Excel virus that can be carried in .xls documents in either the Mac or Windows versions of Office but the virus itself only affects Windows XP or Vista.
A confirmation on Symantec's advisory page states:
Trojan.Mdropper.AC
Type: Trojan
Systems Affected: Windows XP, Windows Vista
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idon'tbelieveit said 1:22PM on 2-26-2009
If this story is true at all, why isn't it available to be checked out on TruthorFiction.com or Snopes.com?
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Sergeant said 7:42PM on 2-27-2009
Computer viruses are payback for corporations accumulating personal information about consumers and exchanging it with other corporations, in the interest of excessive profits. Third Position Army seeks less exploitative technology. Technocracy is ruining the world.
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