Sophos

Talk to our experts

Find your local press contact

Resources

Sophos blogs

Info feeds

What are info feeds?

10 February 2005

Viruses break computers' hearts with Valentine's greetings, reports Sophos

14 February
Viruses have made a note in their diary for St Valentine's Day.

Security experts at Sophos are urging computer users to be on their guard against the threat of viruses disguised as Valentine's greetings.

As Valentine's Day approaches, Sophos has already discovered two new viruses spreading loving greetings via email attachments and peer-to-peer networks. Emails carrying the Kipis-H worm have "Happy Valentine's Day" in their subject lines, and the following message body:

Once activated, the worm turns off all anti-virus protection, allows cybercriminals to access the computer by installing a backdoor Trojan and sends itself to all contacts in the address book forging the sender's email address.

The new VBSWG-D worm spreads via email with the subject line "First Love Story...!!!" and a file called FirstLove.VBS, but on 14 February displays a message explicitly saying "Happy F***ing Valentine...!!!" and then shuts down the computer, after it has sent itself to all the email addresses in the user's address book.

The message displayed by the VBSWG-D worm
The message displayed by the VBSWG-D worm.

"Virus writers will exploit any excuse to dupe innocent computer users into running malicious code," said Graham Cluley, senior technology consultant at Sophos. "Hackers send viral valentines to take control of users' PCs, steal personal information, or take screenshots of confidential information, usernames, passwords and credit card numbers."

Kipis-H and VBSWG-D are the latest in a long line of viruses which have used the promise of love to entice users into activating malicious code:

"This roll call of hexadecimal hanky-panky shows that many people are looking for love in all the wrong places," continued Cluley. "Everyone should beware of unexpected email attachments arriving in their inbox - you may be risking a busted computer instead of a broken heart."

Although there have been few reports of both the Kipis-H and the VBSWG-D worms, Sophos recommends that all computer users be alert to this kind of psychological trick, ensuring that their anti-virus software is up-to-date, and that companies protect themselves with a consolidated solution which can defend them from the threats of both spam and viruses.

See also: