New worm virus 2012 code#
"But without looking at the binary (the raw code of the virus) we can't really comment."
"People are definitely getting excited about it because of the supposed connection to Flame and Stuxnet," Chris Astacio, of San Diego-based Websense, said in telephone interview. Other anti-virus firms were still digesting Gauss's code Thursday. It isn't exactly clear how Gauss would fit in to such a program, and Kaspersky acknowledged that stealing money from banks didn't seem like an activity state-backed actors were likely to be engaged in. Recent reports in The New York Times and The Washington Post have tied both Flame and Stuxnet to a secret U.S.-Israeli program aimed at destabilizing Iran's atomic energy program, which many Western countries believe is a cover for the development of nuclear weapons. Stuxnet's discovery in 2010 was of particular interest to cybersecurity professionals because it interfered with the action of German-made centrifuges the most high-profile example to date of a computer virus causing physical havoc at an industrial facility. So powerful was the spyware that in late April Iranian officials briefly disconnected the entire country's oil industry including the Oil Ministry, energy rigs, and the strategic Khark Island oil terminal in a bid to contain Flame's data theft.įlame in turn has been linked to Stuxnet, an ambitious program aimed at sabotaging uranium enrichment at Iranian nuclear facilities. Kaspersky outlined several similarities which Gauss shared with Flame, a program which was recently-discovered vacuuming information from computers in Iran. Kaspersky said that the virus's command-and-control servers were shut down last month, meaning that, for the time being, "the malware is in a dormant state." The statement acknowledged that much remained unclear about the virus's capabilities including its ultimate purpose.
The firm said that similarities in coding, structure, and operation meant it could say "with a high degree of certainty" that Gauss was related to "Flame," a sophisticated piece of spyware which prompted an Internet blackout across Iran's oil industry in April, and to "Stuxnet," an infrastructure-wrecking worm whose discovery revolutionized the cybersecurity field.
New worm virus 2012 series#
Kaspersky Lab ZAO said in a statement that the new virus, dubbed "Gauss," was aimed at stealing financial information from customers of a series of Lebanese banks.