Halloween
Halloween-themed spam messages are infected with the Storm Trojan

Halloween 'skeleton' spam hides Storm Trojan

Don't let your PC be turned into a zombie

Written by Robert Jaques

Surfers have been warned to be wary of malicious Halloween-themed spam messages infected with the Storm Trojan.

The Marshal Trace team has identified a run of Halloween spam that invites recipients to visit a website and download a program that purports to create a novelty 'dancing skeleton' on the user's desktop.

But victims will be exposed to vulnerability exploits and an executable file named 'halloween.exe'.

This is a copy of the Storm Trojan which compromises the user's PC and merges it into a network of computers that can be commandeered remotely by a controlling server.

The messages arrive with subject lines such as:

'For people with a sense of humour only'
'Halloween Fun'
'Happy Halloween'
'If your in your office, keep the speakers low, lol'
'Nothing is funnier this Halloween'
'Party on this Halloween'
'The most amazing dancing skeleton'
'This will make you laugh'
'You'll laugh your but off'

The Storm Trojan first appeared in January 2007 and quickly gained notoriety by masquerading as current affairs headlines.

More recently, the gang of criminals behind the Storm Trojan has used special events to draw unsuspecting users to infected websites.

The sites are set up specifically to use browser exploits to infect a visitor with a copy of the botnet program.

The gang has used topics ranging from the Fourth of July, the NFL season and greeting cards as hooks to lure spam recipients to the malicious sites.

The Storm botnet is a serious threat and is known to have control over many thousands of PCs. The Marshal Trace team estimates that the Storm botnet is the source of up to 20 per cent of all current spam.

"Today's run of the Storm Trojan using Halloween as its hook is the latest in a long line of social engineering cons used by these criminals," said Bradley Anstis, vice president of products at Marshal Trace.

"Halloween seems to be an increasingly popular holiday outside the US and is gaining global popularity. The Storm gang knows this.

"Many of the previous Storm campaigns have exploited distinctly American events, but this Halloween run will no doubt entice a much wider audience beyond the US."

Graham Cluley, senior technology consultant at Sophos, added: "The gang responsible are experts at choosing topical disguises and crafting alluring emails that the unwary may find difficult to resist.

"What's even more frightening is that when innocent users click to see the skeleton dance, the site also plays The Vengaboys song Boom boom boom boom.

"The good news is that advanced IT security defences are able to stop an attack like this dead in its tracks."

Sophos reported earlier this month that spammers had distributed Halloween-related emails with the intention of gathering personal information from recipients.

See also:

reader comments

related articles

Halloween

Halloween spam spirits away personal data

More of a trick than a treat 31 Oct 2007

 

Tenth of junk email now MP3 spam

Penny stocks promoted as MP3 voice messages 30 Oct 2007

Cyber-crime 'worse than burglary'

One in three Brits has been a victim of cyber-theft 29 Oct 2007

Stock spam gets smart

'Pump and dump' is no such thing 24 Oct 2007

Spammers turn to web redirection to avoid detection

Spammers send users via legitimate sites in bid to avoid anti-spam technology 24 Oct 2007

Storm Worm may have blown itself out

University researcher claims the Zhelatin Trojan is dying down 22 Oct 2007

Srizbi beats Storm to botnet crown

Newcomer responsible for 60 billion spam emails a day 30 Jun 2008

Spammers warn of local nuclear meltdowns

New malware scam claims incidents in UK, Australia and Canada 12 Sep 2008

Spam sales surge

Almost 30 per cent of internet users admit to buying goods from spam emails 19 Aug 2008

latest news

Novell to shuffle EMEA executive pack

Linux vendor shifts partner programme responsibilities to marketing organisation 09 Jan 2009

Ballmer highlights aims for New Year

Ballmer announces Windows 7 beta and future alliances designed to improve information sharing 08 Jan 2009

Active Storage completes UK Jigsaw

Jigsaw unveiled as Raid vendor's first non-US Platinum partner as it launches in Europe 08 Jan 2009

poll

Challenging times ahead?

Challenging times ahead?

Do you think there will be a lot of channel job cuts in 2009?

Previous poll results

Paul Anderson, Trend Micro

Vendor Q&A: Paul Anderson, Trend Micro

During this Q&A session Paul Anderson, UK country manager of Trend Micro talks about the changing threat landscape and how Trend is working with resellers in 2009

Sara Yirrell and Rick Wallis

Vendor Q&A: Rick Wallis, NEC Computers

In this exclusive vendor Q&A, Rick Wallis, UK sales director at NEC Computers talks to CRN editor Sara Yirrell about his firm’s plans for the channel.

events

Channel Expo 2009 logo

Channel Expo 2009

The UK's top reseller exhibition will return to the NEC on 20 May 2009

CRN Fight Night 2009

The channel's only white-collar boxing event is back

Newsletter signup

Sign up for our range of FREE newsletters:

Existing User

Newsletter user login:

Advertisement

White papers

Search white papers

Top categories

Primary Navigation