A new worm that attacks Linux Web servers has compromised more than 3,500 machines, creating a rogue peer-to-peer network that has been used to attack other computers with a flood of data, security experts said Saturday. The worm seems to . . . . A new worm that attacks Linux Web servers has compromised more than 3,500 machines, creating a rogue peer-to-peer network that has been used to attack other computers with a flood of data, security experts said Saturday. The worm seems to spreading fairly rapidly, according to security company Symantec, which early Friday detected about 2,000 infected computers that were actively attacking--a number that climbed to 3,500 late Friday. The company's security personnel could not be contacted for comment Saturday. "It is confirmed through various sources that this worm is in the wild and actively attacking other servers," the company warned its newest advisory Saturday. The worm targets Apache Web server installations on a variety of Linux systems, including those from Red Hat, SuSE, Debian, Mandrake and Slackware. By exploiting a security hole in the Apache OpenSSL module that enables a widely used encrypted communications service known as the secure socket layer, the worm can copy itself to new servers. The link for this article located at news.com is no longer available. . A fresh strain of malware is hitting Linux-based web servers, breaching 4,000 platforms for cryptocurrency mining, taking advantage of Nginx weaknesses.. Linux Malware, P2P Attack Network, Apache Exploit, Data Flood Attack. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
A California company has quietly attached its software to millions of downloads of the popular Kazaa file-trading program and plans to remotely "turn on" people's PCs, welding them into a new network of its own.. . .. A California company has quietly attached its software to millions of downloads of the popular Kazaa file-trading program and plans to remotely "turn on" people's PCs, welding them into a new network of its own. Brilliant Digital Entertainment, a California-based digital advertising technology company, has been distributing its 3D ad technology along with the Kazaa software since late last fall. But in a federal securities filing Monday, the company revealed it also has been installing more ambitious technology that could turn every computer running Kazaa into a node in a new network controlled by Brilliant Digital. The link for this article located at ZDNet is no longer available. . A Texas-based firm has discreetly linked its application to countless installations of the widely-used LimeWire file-sharing tool.. Kazaa Downloads, P2P Network, Remote Activation, Brilliant Digital. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
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