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For immediate release
SIRCAM WORM NOT SCARED OFF BY ANTI-VIRUS PRODUCTS:
Due to its morphing nature, only content checking gateways can stop it!
London,UK, 25 July 2001 - The current assault by the new SirCam email virus
- a fast-spreading destructive worm - is a fresh reminder that organizations
can only be safe against email attacks such as this if they have installed
an email content checking gateway at email server level. Because the SirCam
worm can disguise itself by morphing and adopting different Subject
lines each time it spreads, anti-virus protection alone is not enough,
warned GFI, developer of Mail essentials for Exchange/SMTP, the leading
email content checking and anti-virus solution.
This virulent new email worm is spreading fast, disseminating by emailing
copies of itself to all contacts in the email address books of infected
users. Besides, it sends a random file from the infected user's PC as an
attachment, meaning that this alarming virus could possibly send out
confidential corporate information in the process. The subject line of the
email takes the name of the
file sent out when the SirCam worm replicates itself, making it much harder
for recipients to identify as a virus.
The virus is activated when the recipient double-clicks on its
attachment, which masks an executable file such as a .bat, .com, .lnk and/or
.pif file. It then launches a damaging attack on the recipient's PC, able to
destroy files and directories and occupy hard disk space, as well as mass
mailing itself.
"This latest development in the sphere of harmful email worms
highlights the need for full corporate protection against email attacks and
viruses," stressed Nick Galea, GFI CEO. "The fact that the SirCam
worm is more sophisticated and less definable to the user because it morphs
itself means that organizations must apply safeguards against viruses at
email server level. With our email security product, Mail essentials,
networks are protected against the SirCam worm and any of its variants
because Mail essentials blocks infected and dubious files, such as .bat,
.com, .lnk and .pif files, at server level through its content checking
module."
For more information about the virus, visit
http://www.norman.com/virus_info/w32_sircam.shtml.
More information about Mail essentials may be found at http://www.gfi.com/mesindex.htm.
About GFI
GFI (http://www.gfi.com) has six offices in the US, UK, Germany, France,
Australia and Malta, and has a worldwide network of distributors. GFI is the
developer of FAXmaker, Mail essentials and LANguard, and has supplied
applications to clients such as Microsoft, Telstra, Time Warner Cable, Shell
Oil Lubricants, NASA, DHL, Caterpillar, BMW, the US IRS, and the USAF. GFI
has won the Microsoft Fusion 2000 (GEM) Packaged Application Partner of the
Year award, and was named one of 1999's fastest growing software companies
for Windows by Microsoft Corp. and CMP Media.
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