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This is not the virus but an article explaining how it works when your
computer is clean, and why it keeps passing around,
and around, and around.


Klez: Don't Believe 'From' Line
By Michelle Delio
2:00 a.m. April 30, 2002 PDT
Some Internet users have recently received an e-mail message from a dead

friend. Others have been subscribed to obscure mailing lists. Some have
lost their Internet access after being accused of spamming, and still
others have received e-mailed pornography from a priest.
They're actually experiencing some of the stranger side effects of the
Klez computer virus.
These ersatz e-mails containing the virus are creating Klez-provoked
arguments and accusations that are now spreading as fast as the worm
itself.
The latest variant of the Klez virus started spreading 10 days ago. The
virus e-mails itself from infected machines using a bogus "From" address

randomly plucked from all e-mail addresses stored on an infected
computer's hard drive or network.
Recipients of the virus-laden e-mails, not understanding that the "From"

information is virtually always phony -- or even that they have received

a virus -- have been clogging networks with angry and confused e-mails
that are causing a great deal of cyber-havoc.
People signing up for newsletters and mailing lists that they never
subscribed to has been a major source of frustration for both users and
the list owners.
If Klez happens to send an e-mail "from" a user to an e-mail list's
automatic subscribe address, the list software assumes the e-mail is a
valid subscription request and begins sending mail to the user.
A mailing list for fans of the Grammy Award-winning Steely Dan band has
posted an explanation directed to those who were subscribed to the list
by the virus.
"We are not infected with the Klez virus. We don't know if you are
infected with the Klez virus. You may be. But even if you are not,
someone out there who is infected has both your address and our address
on their computer ... and therein lies the problem," the explanation
reads, in part.
Even when users understand the source of newsletter-generated e-mails,
the amount of mail some lists generate is causing problems.
"Last week I suddenly started getting hundreds of e-mails, daily, with
information about raising tropical fish, purchasing cosmetics and
staying in youth hostels," Victor Montez, a sales rep for a publishing
firm, said. "I do not keep fish, wear makeup or travel rough."
Montez now understands the e-mails came from Klez-subscribed news lists.

But he said that since his free e-mail account only stores a certain
amount of messages, he's lost access to the account twice this week. He
believes he's also lost a significant amount of business-related
e-mails.
"If this keeps up, I may end up having to stay in hostels and I'll have
plenty of free time to devote to raising fish," he said.
In some cases, it almost seems as if Klez is specifically targeting
particularly vulnerable e-mail addresses onto which it can piggyback.
E-mails containing an invitation to view what purports to be an
attachment with pornographic images appears at first glance to have been

sent out by Catholic parishes in New York and Maryland. The attachment
actually contains the Klez virus, and tracing information indicates the
e-mails were actually sent from an Internet service located in the
United Arab Emirates.
"While we would obviously never choose to have our churches' names
affiliated with such material, this is a particularly difficult time to
have
e-mail with obscene references -- which appear to have been sent by
church staff -- circulating," an archdiocese spokeswoman said, referring

to the worldwide sex abuse scandal.
Other newsletter owners are also suffering. Some say their Internet
service providers have accused them of spamming non-members. Many ISPs
cut service when they receive a certain amount of spam complaints.
"I was reported to my ISP over a dozen times this week for spamming,"
said Keith Carlone, the manager of an e-mail newsletter for classic car
enthusiasts. "My ISP threatened to pull my account after the third
complaint and we went down shortly afterwards. It took four days to sort

the problem out."
Andrew Fiber, maintainer of a Jewish folk music mailing list, said that
the list has been inundated with messages about widely off-topic
subjects, so much so that Fiber wondered if most of his members had
suddenly gone "meshuga (a little crazy)."
But then Fiber began getting the complaints.
"All of a sudden we had e-mails coming in from around the world, with
people yelling we had sent them Klez," Fiber said. "The thing is that
'Klezmer' is a type of traditional folk music which we often discuss on
the list and sometimes refer to as Klez. So I thought people were
protesting about our folk music. It was very confusing for a while."
Some users have even reported receiving spooky e-mails from deceased
friends.
"I belonged to a tattoo artists' list that closed down a few years ago.
Last week, I began getting e-mails from the list. Even weirder, I got
eight
e-mails with subject lines that read 'SOS' and 'Eager to See You' from a

list member who died last year. It totally creeped me out," said "Bear"
Montego.
Klez e-mails' subject lines are randomly chosen from a pre-programmed
list of about 120 possibilities, including "Let's be friends," "Japanese

lass' sexy pictures," "Meeting Notice," "Hi Honey" and "SOS."
Klez also sends fake "returned" or "undeliverable" e-mails, advising the

supposed sender that their original, refused e-mail is contained in the
attachment. Clicking on the attachment triggers the virus.
The virus can launch automatically when users click to preview or read
e-mails bearing Klez on systems that have not been patched for a
year-old vulnerability in Internet Explorer, Outlook and Outlook
Express. Klez only affects PCs running Microsoft's Windows operating
system.
As of Monday afternoon, Klez's spread seems to have slowed, but
antiviral experts warn that the worm will be around for a while. (This
article was written in April.  As far as I am concerned, it hasn't
slowed down.  Jacey)
"Anytime you have a virus that is not easily identifiable visually, it
tends to linger," Rod Fewster, Australian representative for antiviral
application NOD32, said. "SirCam and Klez both vary the subject lines of

the e-mails they send, which makes it hard for the average user to
spot."

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