Netsky-B Worm Spreading Widely
Doomjuice.b.  Sophos, a world leader in protecting businesses against spam and  viruses, is warning of a new worm called Netsky-B (W32/Netsky-B).  It  has already received several reports of this worm spreading in the wild.  
  The worm spreads via email – forwarding itself to email addresses found  on the hard drives of infected computers – and Windows network shares.  
  When forwarding itself, the worm spoofs the ‘From:’ field to trick  unsuspecting computer users into running the malicious code.  Infected  emails arrive with a variety of different subject lines and message  texts.  An attached file has a double extension.
    The worm chooses from a selection of filenames when copying itself to  shared folders.  These names vary from ‘angels.pif’,  ‘dictionary.doc.exe’ and ‘programming basics.doc.exe’ to ‘sex sex sex  sex.doc.exe’ and ‘hardcore porn.jpg.exe’.
    “Worms like this, which don’t just rely on email to spread, underline  the need for anti-virus protection on the desktop – computer users  shouldn’t just be relying on email scanning for protection,” said Carole  Theriault, security consultant, Sophos.  “Netsky-B is tricky to identify  because of the wide variety of subject lines and message texts, but  blocking all files with double extensions is an easy way to avoid  infection.”