Home→Descriptions→Email-Worm.Win32.Scano.l
| Detected | Apr 23 2006 23:42 GMT |
| Released | Apr 23 2006 23:42 GMT |
| Published | May 11 2006 15:17 GMT |
This worm spreads via the Internet as an attachment to infected messages. It sends itself to email addresses harvested from the victim machine. The attachment to infected messages does not contain a copy of the worm, but an HTA component, which contains the worm's executable file.
The worm itself is a Windows PE EXE file approximately 18KB in size.
Scano.l is almost identical to Email-Worm.Win32.Scano.e; the only difference is the packer used.
[HKLM\Software\Microsoft\Windows NT\CurrentVersion\Image File Execution Options\explorer.exe]
"Debugger"="%Windir%\csrss.exe"
[HKLM\Software\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Run]
"Application"="%Windir\csrss.exe"
Email-Worms spread via email. The worm sends a copy of itself as an attachment to an email message or a link to its file on a network resource (e.g. a URL to an infected file on a compromised website or a hacker-owned website).
In the first case, the worm code activates when the infected attachment is opened (launched). In the second case, the code is activated when the link to the infected file is opened. In both case, the result is the same: the worm code is activated.
Email-Worms use a range of methods to send infected emails. The most common are:
Email-Worms use a number of different sources to find email addresses to which infected emails will be sent:
Many Email-Worms use more than one of the sources listed above. There are also other sources of email addresses, such as address books associated with web-based email services.
Email-Worm.