Also the followin is talking about same too: http://www.cmpnetasia.com/ViewArt.cfm?Artid=23047&Catid=3&subcat=50 "Dueling Hackers Sparked Bagle, Netsky Worm Blitz Gregg Keizer, TechWeb News , 3-Mar-2004 Security analysts are asking themselves whether the wave of malicious worms that began traversing the Internet Friday and continued their blitz Tuesday was a coordinated attack or mischievous coincidence. No question it has been a deluge of worms. Seven variations of Bagle and two of Netsky surfaced in the last five days. Was the flood just happenstance? Or was there something more devious behind the surge? The answer, said security experts, is a bit of both, with some fighting over hacker turf thrown in for good measure ..." On Thu, 4 Mar 2004, william(at)elan.net wrote:
On Wed, 3 Mar 2004, Stephen J. Wilcox wrote:
Perhaps I'm only following this as its affecting us more, but I dont recall a time previously when I've had so many viruses hitting us and getting thro our scanners with nothing we can do about it. I dont recall seeing viruses with variants as high as 'j' before, especially in the relatively short time since the previous variants were out
Seriously, drop some references if I'm off-track.. its just my perception and I'm not an expert at all with viruses...
This might be an interesting reading on this point - http://www.pcpro.co.uk/news/news_story.php?id=54437 "Rapid MyDoom, Bagle and Netsky variants do battle to control your computer
New variants of MyDoom, Bagle and Netsky arrive in quick succession as the battle to control infected computers heats up.
Sophos has issued alerts this morning for MyDoom-G and H, Bagle-J and K and Netsky F.
The worms are fighting for the control of infected computers which the virus writers can use for their nefarious activities. Bagle-J contains the text 'Hey,NetSky, [expletives removed], don't ruine our bussiness, wanna start a war?'
'You wish that they would have this slagging match on a message board or in a dark alley, rather than on the Internet,' said Graham Cluley, senior technology consultant for Sophos. 'It's like an argument where everyone wants the last word.' So the flood of viruses doesn't look likely to end any time soon.
The text in Bagle-J supports the theories of antivirus companies that virus writers are being given a financial incentive to write these worms - perhaps by spammers who can send their emails through the infected machines.
And indeed previous variants of Bagle and Netsky remove evidence of infection by their rivals ..."
-- William Leibzon Elan Networks william@elan.net