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-
- From: Various
- Subject: The CU in the News
- Date: January 22, 1991
-
- ********************************************************************
- *** CuD #3.03: File 4 of 4: The CU in the News ***
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-
- From: Anonymous
- Subject: Bulgaria and Computer Viruses
- Date: 12-20-90 2253EST
-
- "BULGARIA'S LEADING HIGH-TECH EXPORT APPEARS TO BE COMPUTER VIRUSES"
- From the New York Times, by Chuck Sudetic
-
- SOFIA, Bulgaria -- Bulgaria has become the breeding ground of some of the
- world's most lethal computer viruses, programs that are maliciously
- designed to spread through computer memories and networks and at times
- destroy valuable stored information like bank and medical records.
-
- "We've counted about 300 viruses written for the IBM personal computer; of
- these, 80 or 90 originated in Bulgaria," said Morton Swimmer of Hamburg
- University's Virus Test Center, who specializes in diagnosing and curing
- Eastern European computer viruses.
-
- "Not only do the Bulgarians produce the most computer viruses, they produce
- the best."
-
- One Bulgarian virus, Dark Avenger, has infected American military
- computers, said John McAfee, who runs the Computer Virus Industry
- Association, which is based in Santa Clara, Calif., and tracks viruses for
- computer hardware and software companies.
-
- "I'm not saying that any super-secure computers have been infected," he
- said. "But the U.S. Defense Department has about 400,000 personal
- computers, and anyone who has that many machines has a 100 percent
- probability of being hit."
-
- "It is causing some people in sensitive places a lot of problems," a
- Western diplomat here said, "and they are very reluctant to admit they have
- them."
-
- "I would say that 10 percent of the 60 calls we receive each week are for
- Bulgarian viruses, and 99 percent of these are for Dark Avenger," McAfee
- said, adding the virus has also attacked computers belonging to banks,
- insurance and accounting companies, telecommunications companies and
- medical offices.
-
- "I've had a lot of calls from Frankfurt," Swimmer said. "One bank was very
- nervous about it, but I can't reveal its name for obvious reasons."
-
- Several experts say the spread of the Bulgarian viruses is less the result
- of activities by the secret police than it is the consequence of having
- developed a generation of young Bulgarians whose programming skills found
- few outlets beyond hacking interventions.
-
- A decade ago, this country's Communist leaders decided to make Bulgaria an
- Eastern-bloc Silicon Valley, Vesselin Bontchev, a Bulgarian computer
- specialist, said. Bulgarian factories began turning out computers, and the
-
- government introduced them into workshops, schools and institutes. Many
- computers, however, stood idle because people did not know how to apply
- them or lacked an economic interest in doing so.
-
- "People took office computers home, and their children began playing on
- them," he said, adding that buying a private computer was almost
- impossible.
-
- These children quickly acquired software-writing skills, but had little or
- no chance to apply them constructively, he said.
-
- They began bootlegging copyrighted Western software, especially computer
- games, by overriding devices written into the software to prevent it from
- being copied. Then they started altering the operating systems that drive
- the computer itself.
-
- "From there it was one small step to creating viruses that attack files
- when they are acted on by the operating system," he said.
-
- Bontchev estimated there are only about a dozen young Bulgarian computer
- programmers who have written the viruses that have caused all the trouble.
-
- "Computer hackers here write viruses to show who is who in computer science
- in Bulgaria, to find a place in the sun," said Slav Ivanov, editor of a
- Bulgarian computer magazine. "The young computer people just don't rank in
- our society. They don't receive enough money."
-
- The average wage of a software writer in Bulgaria is about $30 a month,
- Bontchev said.
-
- One virus designer, however, acknowledged that revenge was also a factor.
-
- "I designed my first computer virus for revenge against people at work,"
- said Lubomir Mateev, who helped write a non-destructive virus known as
- Murphy, which shares many of Dark Avenger's tricks. "Our first virus made
- all the computers at work send out a noise when they were switched on."
-
- Mateev, 23, said he collaborated with Dark Avenger's designer last spring
- on a new virus that is harder to diagnose and cure because it is
- self-mutating.
-
- "Dark Avenger's designer told me he would take a job as a janitor in a
- Western software firm just to get out of Bulgaria," he said. Attempts
- during several months to get in touch with Dark Avenger's creator proved
- fruitless.
-
- For now, Bulgaria's computer virus designers can act with complete legal
- immunity.
-
- "We have no law on computer crime," said Ivanov, whose magazine offers free
- programs that cure known Bulgarian viruses. "The police are only
- superficially interested in this matter."
-
- Bulgaria's secret-police computers have also been infected, said a
- well-placed Bulgarian computer expert, who spoke on condition of anonymity
- and refused to elaborate.
-
- Dark Avenger has also spread to the Soviet Union, Britain, Czechoslovakia,
- Poland and Hungary, Bontchev said, adding, "I've even had one report that
- it has popped up in Mongolia."
-
- "The Dark Avenger is the work of a Sofia-based programmer who is known to
- have devised 13 different viruses with a host of different versions,"
- Bontchev said. "He is a maniac."
-
- Bontchev said he was almost certain Bulgaria's government was not involved
- with Dark Avenger.
-
- "A computer virus cannot be used as a weapon because it cannot be aimed
- accurately and can return like a boomerang to damage programs belonging to
- the creator himself," he said. "It can be used only to cause random damage,
- like a terrorist bomb."
-
- Unlike less infectious viruses, Dark Avenger attacks computer data and
- programs when they are copied, printed or acted on in other ways by a
- computer's operating system, Bontchev said. The virus destroys information
- every 16th time an infected program is run.
-
- A virus can spread from one computer to another either on floppy disks or
- through computer modems or computer networks, he said. Many viruses are
- spread at computer fairs and through computer bulletin-board systems where
- enthusiasts exchange information over the telephone.
-
- Legislation on computer crime will be introduced in Parliament once a
- criminal code is adopted, said Ilko Eskanazi, a parliamentary
- representative who has taken an interest in the virus issue.
-
- "We are now seeing viruses emerging on entirely new ground in Eastern
- Europe," Bontchev said.
-
- "Things may get much worse before they improve," he warned. "The first law
- of computer viruses is that if a virus can be made, it will be. The second
- law is that if a computer virus cannot be made, it will be anyway."
-
- +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
-
- From: portal!cup.portal.com!ZEL@UNKNOWN.DOMAIN
- Subject: Mitnick and DEC Conference
- Date: Thu, 3 Jan 91 20:00:43 PST
-
- DECUS Bars Hacker: Meeting attendees focus on security
- by Anne Knowles
- FROM: From Communications Week December 24, 1990.
-
- Las Vegas-While attendees of the DECUS user group meeting were busy
- learning about DEC security, an infamous computer hacker was trying to
- register for the Digital Equipment Computer User Society's Fall 90
- Symposium.
-
- Luckily for DECUS, the hacker was recognized by show personnel, who
- refused him admittance. DECUS contacted its lawyers and is now developing
- a policy for dealing with such situations in the future, said bill
- Brindley, president of the 30-year old user group. In the interim, the
- hacker was barred from the meeting.
-
- DECUS is the organization for users of Digital Equipment Corp. systems and
- ne tworks. With 120,000 members worldwide, it is the largest user group of
- its kind. the group holds seminannual symposiums, week-long events of
- daily seminars and hourly sessions on mostly technical topics concerning
- its membership.
-
- DECUS had never before been confronted by a hacker attempting to register
- for one of its symposiums, Brindley said , though an attendee was evicted
- from the show two years ago when he was discovered hacking. DEC identified
- this year's hacker as Kevin Mitnick, who is well-known to both DECUS and
- DEC. He is currently on probation after having been found guilty in
- federal court of breaking into Easynet, DEC's internal computer network.
- His probation stipulates that he not enter a networked system or one with a
- modem, Brindley said. During its symposiums, DECUS supplies networked
- terminnals for attendee's use. "It would have been logistically impossible
- to restrict anyone [who had gained admittance to the show] from the
- systems," Brindley said.
-
- The article goes on to other items from this point, but this is the part
- that deals directly with hacking.
-
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