Flame Virus Commits Suicide
SEARCH BLOG: TECHNOLOGY
TUESDAY, MAY 29, 2012
New Computer Malware Attacks The Middle East
This new threat appears not to cause physical damage, but to collect huge amounts of sensitive information, said [Russian security firm] Kaspersky's [Labs] chief malware expert Vitaly Kamluk.
"Once a system is infected, Flame begins a complex set of operations, including sniffing the network traffic, taking screenshots, recording audio conversations, intercepting the keyboard, and so on," he said.
Just as suddenly, the threat has disappeared.
From the Herald Sun:
US computer security researchers said overnight that the Flame computer virus that smouldered undetected for years in Middle Eastern energy facilities has gotten orders to vanish, leaving no trace.
Anti-virus company Symantec said in a blog post that late last week, some Flame "command-and-control servers sent an updated command to several compromised computers."
"This command was designed to completely remove (Flame) from the compromised computers."
Flame malicious software (malware) appears to have been "in the wild" for two years or longer and prime targets so far have been energy facilities in the Middle East, especially in Iran.
The discovery of Flame immediately sparked speculation that it had been created by US and Israeli security services to steal information about Iran's controversial nuclear drive.
Kaspersky Lab, one of the world's biggest producers of anti-virus software, said the Flame virus was "about 20 times larger than Stuxnet," the worm which was discovered in June 2010 and used against the Iranian nuclear program.
High concentrations of computers compromised by Flame were also found in Lebanon, the West Bank and Hungary. Additional infections have been reported in Austria, Russia, Hong Kong and the United Arab Emirates.
Compromised computers included many being used from home connections, according to security researchers who were looking into whether reports of infections in some places resulted from workers using laptops while traveling.Probably just some kids at the local high school.