home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
-
- LONDON (Feb 4, 1996 1:11 p.m. EST) -- Software saboteurs have
- created the first computer virus specifically targeted at
- Microsoft's Windows 95 program, British researchers said
- Sunday.
-
-
- The virus can corrupt programs so that they no longer
- function, and then spread to other users' machines, Paul
- Ducklin, an analyst for the British software company Sophos,
- told The Associated Press.
-
- "It is the first virus we've seen that is written specifically
- for Windows 95 ," said Ducklin, whose company specializes in
- writing programs that destroy viruses.
-
- "So, although it is not particularly well-written, Boza will
- go down in history," Ducklin said. Analysts have named the
- virus Boza after a Bulgarian liquor "so powerful that just
- looking at it will give you a headache," Ducklin said.
- Fortunately for the estimated 10 million users of Windows 95,
- the virus does not appear particularly contagious.
-
- "To infect someone else's machine, you would have to give them
- an infected pr ogram, and they would have to run it," Alan
- Solomon, chairman of the S and S International software firm,
- told The Independent on Sunday newspaper. "Most people don't
- swap programs around like that," Solomon said.
-
- Ducklin said Boza is not yet "in the wild" -- computer talk
- for a virus that is replicating itself on regular users'
- personal computers.
- So far, it is circulating mainly among companies that make
- anti-virus programs, Ducklin said. Software is available to
- destroy it.
-
- Computer analysts do not know who made the virus, although
- there is a clue in one of the messages that Boza occasionally
- throws on computer screens: "VLAD Australia does it again with
- the world's first Win95 virus," a reference to a well -known
- group of virus makers.
-
- Microsoft released Windows 95 in August without an anti-virus
- program. The Bellevue, Wash.-based company early on had to fight
- a perception that one version of Windows 95 came with a virus
- already on the diskette.
-
- Microsoft 95 differs from the company's previous operating
- systems because it can run programs whose instructions are 32
- bits long, rather than 16 bits, allowing greater flexibility
- through the increased memory. Boza is written specifically to
- corrupt 32-bit programs.
-
- The virus attaches itself to existing programs. It makes
- copies of itself while they run, and the copies are then
- attached to other programs.
-
-
-