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Jan
08
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WEEKLY REVIEW

Win32.Worm.Sohanad.NAW – The Malicious Friend you Talk to on Yahoo Messenger

08 January 2010
Year 2009 was surely the year of the Downadup worm. Although the worm has slowly started to decay, its legacy continues for the new year in the presence of smaller, yet extremely annoying e-threats able to spread themselves through a variety of media.

Initially discovered on November 2007, Win32.Worm.Sohanad.NAW is a self-spreading e-threat able to download files from remote locations and stealthily execute them on the infected machine. The worm is extremely aggressive in terms of self-replication, as it features no less than three distinct methods of infecting new systems: by sharing itself on the local network, by infecting any removable storage device plugged into the infected computer and by sending enticing messages to all the Yahoo Messenger contacts of the infected YIM user.

One of the first signs that the system has been infected is computer slowdown and intense Internet activity, as worms consume most of the bandwidth in order to replicate themselves over the network. Win32.Worm.Sohanad.NAW tampers with the Windows Registry in order to prevent the user from accessing the Task Manager, Regedit and Folder Options, and also adds a new registry entry in HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows NT\CurrentVersion\Winlogon in order to register itself at every Windows restart.

In order to infect as many computers as possible, the worm drops copies of itself on all removable or mapped drives, along with an autorun.inf file that automatically executes these copies when these drives are accessed.

Other variants of Win32.Worm.Sohanad.NAW are able to create scheduled tasks using the Microsoft Job Scheduler to execute itself every day at 9:00 AM starting on the day it is first executed.

In order to stay safe and fully enjoy your Internet experience, BitDefender recommends that you install and regularly update an anti-malware suite with anti-virus, anti-spam, anti-phishing and firewall modules.

Information in this article is available courtesy of BitDefender virus researcher George Cabau.



Bogdan never trusts anything until it is disassembled into small pieces and carefully inspected. The passion for writing and the almost obsessive attention to details are some of his greatest qualities and, at the same time, some of his greatest flaws.

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