Trojan<
/a> viruses to be used for even more malicious purposes, such as the
culling of credit cards and passwords, Dunham says.
"In the case of the Norio Trojan<
/a>, it changes the registry and the host file," he says. "You type in
a name like Microsoft.com, it will
redirect you to a site they want you to go to. You could make it
redirect you to a fake Citibank.com Web site and get you to fill in
sensitive information."
Brandon removed the malicious code by using Spyware info's remediation kit
called CWSweep. (PestPatrol also provides a removal kit.) He's since
been tracking down the IP addresses and domain names that the virus
loaded into his registry. Many of the domain names are a variation of
Coolwebsearch.com.
"I want to find the people responsible for this, the affiliates in
collusion with this, and turn them into Microsoft for that bounty
it promises on virus writers," he says.
With the IP addresses and Web site names so easy to find, you'd think
tracking the virus writers would be easy for someone with Internet
tracking skills. But most of the IP addresses Brandon's investigated
led to bogus hosting providers and anonymized administrative contacts.
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