• On The Insider: Sexiest Magazine Covers of All Time

April 14, 2005 11:22 AM PDT

Worm attack forces Reuters IM offline

Reuters has shut down its instant messaging system after suffering an onslaught from a new Kelvir worm, the company confirmed Thursday.

The London-based international media company decided to take its Reuters Messaging system completely offline after noticing the attack on its network earlier on Thursday, a Reuters representative said.

Related news
Insecure messaging?
IM attackers are getting smarter.

The new variant attempted to spread by sending fake instant messages to people in contact lists on infected systems, a technique used by earlier Kelvir strains. The messages, crafted to look exactly like legitimate IM correspondence, attempted to lure people to a Web site where their computers would be infected with Kelvir, the representative said.

"In order to protect our customers and other users, and to prevent RM (Reuters Messaging) from being used to propagate this worm, Reuters has temporarily suspended the RM service and is working to resolve this matter," the company said in a statement. It has not reported any incidents of consumers being infected by the attack.

Unlike the free IM software marketed by rivals America Online, Microsoft and Yahoo, Reuters Messaging was created as a corporate tool, closed off from public subscribers and for internal company use only. But in recent years, the company has moved to connect its consumers with those networks. In 2003, Reuters signed deals with both AOL and Microsoft's MSN unit to allow users of its IM software to link to those services.

Technical workers at Reuters said they believe the new Kelvir attack could also target other IM systems. No other companies with messaging software had reported such a threat as of midday Thursday, however.

In a recent report on the growing threat of IM-borne viruses, the IMlogic Threat Center--an industry consortium led by security software maker IMlogic--indicated that Kelvir was among the three most frequently detected IM infections at work places, along with the Bropia and Serflog worms. The group also said that it has recently seen multiple incidents of IM phishing and identity theft reported on IM networks.

At the moment, Reuters has no timetable for bringing the IM system back online, the company said. Representatives said the company wants to make sure the issue has been completely remedied before allowing people to begin using the software again.

See more CNET content tagged:
Kelvir worm, IM, worm attack, IMLogic, messaging

Add a Comment (Log in or register) 1 comment
Why Didn't They Implement Lotus SameTime!
by April 14, 2005 11:56 AM PDT
While I am not quite sure about which vendor's Instant Messaging infrastructure Reuters has implemented... from this report, it appears that their IM infrastructure is not consistent with the security offered by "IBM's Lotus Instant Messaging and Conferencing"; re: http://www.lotus.com/lotus/offering2.nsf/wdocs/rttc which is reported to be the number one IM product among corporate users.
Reply to this comment
Powered by Jive Software
advertisement

Latest tech news headlines

Resource center from News.com sponsors
You Need The Speed of Norton 2009
Introducing Norton Internet Security™2009

Click Here!
With one-click, one-minute install, under 8MB of memory usage and fewer, shorter scans, it's the fastest security suite anywhere. Norton. Smart Security, Engineered for Speed. Get a FREE trial today!

Click Here!
The Fastest Security Suite Anywhere

Experience the revolutionary Norton Internet Security™ 2009. With Norton™ Insight, a new feature, you get precision security that targets only at risk files for fewer, faster, shorter scans

Win a Trip to Space!*

Enter the Blast Off with Norton Sweepstakes for your shot at a trip to space. You could experience being fast and weightless, just like the new Norton 2009. *No purchase necessary; click for full details.

FREE Trial!

Act now to get your FREE trial of Norton Internet Security 2009. Try it for the protection. Love it for the speed

Norton Safe Web NEW!

A community-based system that rates web site safety

Norton Labs NEW!

Users can download new security technologies and share input directly with developers. Help us shape our future products!

RSS Feeds

Add headlines from CNET News to your homepage or feedreader.

More feeds available in our RSS feed index.

advertisement

Inside CNET News

Scroll Left Scroll Right