News & Information for Technology Purchasers
NewsFactor Network Sites:   NewsFactor.com Security CRM Business Sci-Tech Newsletters XML/RSS Feed  
   
Home Enterprise I.T. Hardware Software Communications More Topics...
Viruses & Malware
Average Rating:
Rate this article:  
U.K. Police Make Trojan Computer Virus Arrests U.K. Police Make Trojan Computer Virus Arrests
By Raphael G. Satter
November 19, 2009 7:08AM

    Bookmark and Share
The Zbot family of viruses has periodically swept across the Internet, stealing personal information from computers across the world and feeding it back to cyber-criminals. The viruses are commonly known as Trojan Horses or Trojans because they sneak onto computers and attack them from the inside, harvesting millions of lines of data.
 



British police have made the first European arrests connected to the spread of a data Relevant Products/Services-thieving virus thought to have infected tens of thousands of computers worldwide, Scotland Yard said Wednesday.

The electronic crimes unit of London's police force said a man and a woman, both 20, were arrested in the English city of Manchester on Nov. 3 on suspicion of helping infect computers with programs sometimes known as "Zbot" or "ZeuS."

One expert described the viruses as the "most notorious pieces of malware of recent times."

"This is one of the most frequent families of worms that we encounter," said Graham Cluley, a technology consultant with British security firm Sophos PLC. "The ferocity with which it's been spammed out on occasions has really hit our radar."

Cluley said the Zbot family of viruses first came to his attention in 2007. Since then it has periodically swept across the Internet, stealing personal information from computers across the world and feeding it back to cyber-criminals. The viruses are commonly known as Trojan Horses or Trojans because they sneak onto computers and attack them from the inside, harvesting millions of lines of data -- including banking information, credit card numbers and social networking Relevant Products/Services passwords.

The viruses spread by sending e-mails or other messages from infected computers, impersonating banks, tax officials, credit card companies or even friends and enticing potential victims to click on a link that downloads the Trojan.

Police said given the amount of information stolen "the potential financial gains to the culprits and losses to individuals and institutions are very substantial."

Cluley said it was impossible to know how much money had been lost to the viruses, adding that attacks were ongoing -- including two big waves in the past week alone.

Police said the Manchester pair were arrested on suspicion of breaking Britain's fraud and computer laws. It said the arrests were the first in Europe -- and among the first worldwide -- to combat the spread of Zbot but did not provide further details.

The pair, who have since been released on bail, were not identified.
 


© 2010 Associated Press under contract with YellowBrix. All rights reserved.
 

Tell Us What You Think
Your Comment:



Advertisement


 Viruses & Malware
1.   Malware Research Group Forms
2.   DIY Cybercrime Kits Spur Phishing
3.   Malware To Target Social Networks
4.   Facebook Offers McAfee Protection
5.   Keep Track of Dangers on the Web


advertisement
Product Information and Resources for Technology You Can Use To Boost Your Business

Enterprise Hardware Spotlight
Nvidia Auto-Switches Notebook GPU To Save Battery Life
Nvidia has taken the wraps off a notebook technology that chooses the best graphics processor for any given application and automatically routes the workload to Nvidia or Intel processors.
 
Microsoft Says Battery Woes Not Caused By Windows 7
Battery problems on Windows 7 machines are not caused by the operating system. That's the position of Stephen Sinofsky, head of the Windows division, in a long posting on the Windows engineering blog.
 
IBM's New POWER7 Servers Save Energy with Big Loads
IBM has unveiled high-capacity servers that are the first to be based on its new, multi-core POWER7 chip. It said the new line is designed "to manage the most demanding emerging applications."
 

Enterprise Technology Spotlight
Intel Launches Quad-Core Itanium 9300 Series Processor
After two unexpected delays, Intel has launched the Itanium 9300 series, a 64-bit, quad-core processor code-named Tukwila that is expected to double the performance of its predecessor.
 
Google May Add Facebook, Twitter Links to Gmail
Google will reportedly roll more social-networking features into Gmail, the fastest-growing e-mail service. The new features could save users the trouble of switching to Facebook or Twitter.
 
IBM's New POWER7 Servers Save Energy with Big Loads
IBM has unveiled high-capacity servers that are the first to be based on its new, multi-core POWER7 chip. It said the new line is designed "to manage the most demanding emerging applications."
 

Navigation
NewsFactor Network
Home/Top News | Enterprise I.T. | Hardware | Software | Communications | Network Security | Wireless Tech | Linux/Open Source
Apple/Macintosh | Microsoft/Windows | World Wide Web | Data Storage | E-Commerce | Personal Tech | Tech Trends | Press Releases
NewsFactor Network Enterprise I.T. Sites
NewsFactor Technology News | Enterprise Security Today | CRM Daily

NewsFactor Business and Innovation Sites
Sci-Tech Today | NewsFactor Business Report

NewsFactor Services
FreeNewsFeed | Free Newsletters | Free Whitepapers | XML/RSS Feed

About NewsFactor Network | How To Contact Us | Article Reprints | Careers @ NewsFactor | Services for PR Pros | Top Tech Wire | How To Advertise

Privacy Policy | Terms of Service
© Copyright 2000-2010 NewsFactor Network. All rights reserved. Article rating technology by Blogowogo.