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"Autostart" Worm Breaks Mac Malware Silence
-------------------------------------------
  by Mark H. Anbinder

  Nearly three years after the last Macintosh-specific virus
  appeared on the scene, a new piece of Macintosh malware (code
  designed with malicious intent) has appeared. The worm, which is
  designed to overwrite data files, has spread rapidly in the
  desktop publishing community in Hong Kong, where it was first
  spotted. (Unlike a virus, which must attach itself to other
  software in order to function, a worm executes by itself.)

  The worm, which anti-virus analysts have dubbed Autostart-9805,
  takes advantage of a feature in QuickTime 2.0 and later that
  enables CD-ROMs to start a program immediately upon insertion. In
  QuickTime 2.5 and later, the QuickTime Settings control panel lets
  the user disable this feature.


**Inner Workings** -- Analysts say the worm can be transmitted via
  almost any HFS or HFS+ disk volume, including floppy disks, most
  removable cartridge drives, magneto-optical disks, recordable CD
  disks, hard disks, and even mountable DiskCopy or ShrinkWrap disk
  image files. The worm only operates on a PowerPC system running
  the Mac OS, and will only initially infect a computer that's
  running QuickTime 2.0 or later with the CD-ROM AutoPlay feature
  enabled.

  Infected disks contain an invisible application file named DB of
  type APPL and creator ???? in the root directory, and the AutoPlay
  attribute is set in the disk's boot blocks. When the infected disk
  is mounted, the DB application launches and copies itself to the
  Extensions folder of the active System Folder. The copy, also an
  invisible file, is named Desktop Print Spooler and its type is
  appe (don't confuse this file with the visible and legitimate
  Desktop Printer Spooler extension). The worm then restarts the
  computer, and reloads into memory via the invisible Desktop Print
  Spooler, which runs as a faceless background application and
  doesn't appear in the Application menu.

  About every thirty minutes, the worm examines all mounted volumes,
  and attempts to infect any that aren't infected by copying itself
  back to the root directory as DB with AutoPlay enabled. It then
  searches mounted volumes for files whose names end with "data",
  "cod", or "csa" and whose data forks are larger than 100 bytes, or
  files ending with "dat" that are larger than about 2 MB. When it
  finds such a file, the worm overwrites approximately the first 1
  MB of the data fork with garbage.


**Are You Infected?** So far, anti-virus experts don't believe
  AutoStart-9805 has spread much beyond the desktop publishing
  community in Hong Kong, so it should be possible to keep it from
  spreading much farther. Check with your anti-virus utility
  publisher for the latest updates, keeping in mind that outdated
  virus definition files are useless! Visible symptoms you can check
  for include:

* The system unexpectedly restarts after mounting a volume, which
  is when the initial infection occurs.

* The application name DB flashes briefly in the menu bar when the
  application launches.

* A disk volume contains an invisible application file named DB in
  the root directory, or the invisible Desktop Print Spooler file in
  the Extensions folder. Use ResEdit, Norton Disk Editor, the Mac OS
  Find File utility (press Option while clicking on the Name menu to
  reveal a Visibility item), or a similar tool to search for
  invisible files.

* A process named Desktop Print Spooler is visible when using
  tools like Process Watcher or MacsBug.

* Extensive, unexplained disk activity every 30 minutes.


**Prevention** -- The risk of a new infection can be effectively
  eliminated by disabling the CD-ROM AutoPlay feature in the
  QuickTime Settings control panel in QuickTime 2.5 or later, though
  this will not help if the system is already infected. It also will
  not prevent an infected Mac from creating the invisible DB files
  on a system whose volumes are shared on a network. Versions of
  QuickTime prior to 2.5 lack the means to disable the AutoPlay
  feature, so Apple's QuickTime group recommends upgrading to
  QuickTime 2.5 if you have an older release. Disabling Audio CD
  AutoPlay is unnecessary, as ordinary audio CDs cannot carry this
  worm.

QuickTime 2.5

**Utilities** -- Dr. Solomon's Anti-virus Toolkit and Virex have
  been updated to handle this worm, and Symantec expects to release
  an update for SAM. John Norstad's freeware Disinfectant cannot
  detect this problem, so he recommends using an up-to-date
  commercial utility that does. He plans to make an announcement
  soon as to whether Disinfectant will be updated to handle
  Autostart-9805.

  Apple's QuickTime evangelist Charles Wiltgen expressed the
  company's delight that "the commercial utility vendors have
  responded to this as quickly as they have." Wiltgen encourages
  QuickTime users to disable the CD-ROM AutoPlay feature unless they
  have a specific need for it, and to obtain and use a current
  anti-virus utility.

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