Dark Reading is part of the Informa Tech Division of Informa PLC

This site is operated by a business or businesses owned by Informa PLC and all copyright resides with them.Informa PLC's registered office is 5 Howick Place, London SW1P 1WG. Registered in England and Wales. Number 8860726.

Attacks/Breaches

4/2/2009
03:25 PM
Connect Directly
Google+
Twitter
RSS
E-Mail
50%
50%

OpenDNS Reports 500,000 Machines Infected By Conficker

April Fool's Day was mostly quiet -- but the number of machines hit by Conficker.C are starting to roll in

Though the Conficker worm watch was mostly for naught, among the data rolling in from Wednesday's activity is an OpenDNS report that says 500,000 of its customers were infected with the worm's latest variant. "That number is more than I expected," says David Ulevitch, founder of OpenDNS. "We're not representative of the whole Internet, of course, but to me this indicates the infection for [Conficker] is probably larger than people expected."

OpenDNS, which provide a domain name service offering, also found that among its customers, Vietnam has the highest rate of Conficker.C infection, with 13.3 percent; followed by Brazil, 11.6 percent; the Philippines, 11.1 percent; Indonesia, 10.9 percent; Algeria, 7.3 percent; the U.S., 4.7 percent; and India, just less than 4.7 percent.

Vietnamese researchers at security firm BKIS, meantime, reported earlier today 1.3 million Conficker.C-infected machines. BKIS found that worldwide, China has the highest rate of infection, with 13.8 percent, followed by Brazil (10.4 percent) and Russia (9.3 percent), and with the U.S. in the 2 percent range.

British Telecom, meanwhile, said it detected more than 25 Conficker.C worm infection incidents among its U.S. customers' networks.

"In general, the level of sophistication of Conficker is impressive," OpenDNS's Ulevitch says. "It will continue to evolve to evade detection...but we haven't seen it doing anything malicious yet. It's scary in that regard."

Have a comment on this story? Please click "Discuss" below. If you'd like to contact Dark Reading's editors directly, send us a message. Kelly Jackson Higgins is the Executive Editor of Dark Reading. She is an award-winning veteran technology and business journalist with more than two decades of experience in reporting and editing for various publications, including Network Computing, Secure Enterprise ... View Full Bio

 

Recommended Reading:

Comment  | 
Print  | 
More Insights
Comments
Newest First  |  Oldest First  |  Threaded View
COVID-19: Latest Security News & Commentary
Dark Reading Staff 8/10/2020
Researcher Finds New Office Macro Attacks for MacOS
Curtis Franklin Jr., Senior Editor at Dark Reading,  8/7/2020
Healthcare Industry Sees Respite From Attacks in First Half of 2020
Robert Lemos, Contributing Writer,  8/13/2020
Register for Dark Reading Newsletters
White Papers
Video
Cartoon Contest
Write a Caption, Win an Amazon Gift Card! Click Here
Latest Comment: It's a technique known as breaking out of the sandbox kids.
Current Issue
Special Report: Computing's New Normal, a Dark Reading Perspective
This special report examines how IT security organizations have adapted to the "new normal" of computing and what the long-term effects will be. Read it and get a unique set of perspectives on issues ranging from new threats & vulnerabilities as a result of remote working to how enterprise security strategy will be affected long term.
Flash Poll
The Changing Face of Threat Intelligence
The Changing Face of Threat Intelligence
This special report takes a look at how enterprises are using threat intelligence, as well as emerging best practices for integrating threat intel into security operations and incident response. Download it today!
Twitter Feed
Dark Reading - Bug Report
Bug Report
Enterprise Vulnerabilities
From DHS/US-CERT's National Vulnerability Database
CVE-2019-20383
PUBLISHED: 2020-08-13
ABBYY network license server in ABBYY FineReader 15 before Release 4 (aka 15.0.112.2130) allows escalation of privileges by local users via manipulations involving files and using symbolic links.
CVE-2020-24348
PUBLISHED: 2020-08-13
njs through 0.4.3, used in NGINX, has an out-of-bounds read in njs_json_stringify_iterator in njs_json.c.
CVE-2020-24349
PUBLISHED: 2020-08-13
njs through 0.4.3, used in NGINX, allows control-flow hijack in njs_value_property in njs_value.c. NOTE: the vendor considers the issue to be "fluff" in the NGINX use case because there is no remote attack surface.
CVE-2020-7360
PUBLISHED: 2020-08-13
An Uncontrolled Search Path Element (CWE-427) vulnerability in SmartControl version 4.3.15 and versions released before April 15, 2020 may allow an authenticated user to escalate privileges by placing a specially crafted DLL file in the search path. This issue was fixed in version 1.0.7, which was r...
CVE-2020-24342
PUBLISHED: 2020-08-13
Lua through 5.4.0 allows a stack redzone cross in luaO_pushvfstring because a protection mechanism wrongly calls luaD_callnoyield twice in a row.