The Santa
Claus worm doesn't care whether you've been naughty or nice, but it's making a
list of PCs to infect this holiday season, according to a threat alert released by
security firm IMlogic Inc. today. A new
instant-messaging worm called IM.GiftCom.All is making the rounds this holiday
season. Rated as a "medium" threat by IMlogic, the worm attempts to get users of
the instant-messaging networks run by America Online Inc., Yahoo Inc. and
Microsoft Corp. to visit a seemingly festive Web site featuring Santa Claus.
The message comes from someone already present on
a user's "buddy list," said Art Gilliland, vice president of products for IMlogic.
It contains a supposed link to a URL (uniform resource locator) starting with "santaclause.aol.com/....."
However, clicking on that link takes users to a
different Web site and triggers the download of a malicious file to a user's PC,
Gilliland said. That file is created using rootkit techniques, making it extremely
difficult to detect with conventional antivirus or operating system tools, he
said. Once resident on a system, the file tries to shut down antivirus software
and collects personal information that can be redistributed over the Internet.
IMlogic has not recorded an instance where that
personal information was actually sent out to the Internet, but the program does
log information, Gilliland said.
Users are advised to avoid clicking on anything
sent through an instant-messaging system unless they have verified that the file
or picture is legitimate and the sender intended to pass it along, Gilliland said.
IMlogic recently identified an instant-messaging bot that produces canned
assurances that a file is legitimate when the recipient replies to check its
authenticity, so it's important to take extra care to verify the sender's
intentions, he said.