The worm, known as W32/BadTrans.B-mm, has been spotted in 50 countries, and is propagating rapidly, says Dave White, technical manager for security company MessageLabs. It takes advantage of a well-publicized hole in Explorer, the same vulnerability used by the Nimda virus, which infected millions of computers earlier this fall.
"We're getting hit quite hard," says Russ Cooper, surgeon general for security firm TruSecure Corp. He says that a patch for the IE vulnerability has been available since March, but that home users in particular have been slow to update their security. "Unless they've had a bad experience before, they haven't learned what they should and shouldn't do," he says. "The average person doesn't even know that these things exist, so adoption is going to be slow."
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