Spacer Sidebar Directory Map

The Training Book, the handbook for trainers

Training Express computer learning guides

 


ITrain - International Association of Computer Trainers Password-Stealing Program
Wild things out of the net
ITINFO Sponsor
Marketing On Chump Change

Isn't that music to your ears?
Why do most marketing programs cost an arm and a leg?
Quit throwing your hard earned money down a rat hole!

With FastTips Newsletters your clients rave about how smart you are for giving them so much free information.
Oh, and by the way, it won't cost you a fortune.

Click to Stop Wasting Money

Internet Poll
Have you attended a seminar via e-learning?
yes
no

poll archive


Malicious Program Steals Passwords & URLs
by Dave Murphy
ISSN 1535-3613

Dave Murphy, DGL President & ITrain founder A new email attachment is carrying a nasty trojan horse program that collects AOL usernames, passwords, and web browser history files. The data is then transmitted to an email address in China. The trojan horse program is named "picture.exe."

A trojan horse is a program that works in a way that the user does not expect it to. It differs from a virus in that it does not replicate itself.

This trojan horse, which Network Associates (McAfee) has dubbed "URLsnoop," adds a file called "note.exe" or "picture.exe" to the run line of the "win.ini" file of the Windows subdirectory. The program is then executed the next time Windows is started.

The program than does three nasty operations:

  1. it makes a list of all .txt and .html files on the affected hard drive
  2. collects all the URLs stored in the Internet web browser's cache
  3. steals the username and password of the AOL program, if installed.

The collected information is then encrypted and transmitted to a Chinese email address.

Don't execute programs you receive as email attachments unless you're expecting the file and you know the sender.

I've posted a list of anti-virus points of information at dgl.com/docs/virus.html.

Have you ever been hit by a virus? What precautions do you take to prevent being hit? Leave your comments on the message center at dgl.com/msg.

Anti-Virus information
Message center


Subscribe to ITINFO.
Receive computing and Internet news & tips
by subscribing to the ITINFO information service.
Type your Internet email address in the form, and click "Subscribe."
Email Address:

Damar Group, Ltd. helps business use technology.

ITINFO is again accepting sponsors. Sponsor messages are included in ITINFO's email newsletter and are permanently posted to DGL's website and online reference areas.

ITINFO is an electronic publication of Damar Group, Ltd., publisher of Training Express computer learning guides. Comments and submissions to info@dgl.com.

Previous issues are on our website at http://dgl.com/itinfo/.

updated January 7, 1999
http://dgl.com/itinfo/1999/it990107a.html

Return to DGL homepage
Copyright © 1999, Damar Group, Ltd., All Rights Reserved