COMPUTERS
September 7, 2007 1:29 PM PDT

Storm worm rivals world's best supercomputers

Posted by Robert Vamosi
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What good are several million Storm worm infected PCs? According to one researcher, the current computing power of Storm worm's botnet is greater than IBM's Blue Gene supercomputer. "If you calculate pure theoretical throughput," Matt Sergeant, chief antispam technologist with security vendor MessageLabs, "then I'm sure the botnet has more capacity than IBM's Blue Gene. If you sat them down to play chess, the botnet would win."

The Australian publication IT News also quotes Sergeant as saying, "In terms of power, the botnet utterly blows the supercomputers away." He goes on to say that just 2 million of the suspected 50 million Storm worm-infected machines are equivalent to the computing power of the top 500 supercomputers.

In the last few months, antivirus vendors have reported an increase in Storm worm infections. Infected computers are often used to relay spam. They can also be used to attack Web sites in what's called a denial-of-service attack.

More alarming is the amount of control the Storm worm bot-herders apparently have over their creation. "We've seen spikes where the owner is experimenting with something and those spikes are usually five to 10 times what we normally see," Sergeant told IT News. "That means they can turn on the taps whenever they want to."

MessageLabs has more on the Storm worm in its monthly report on spam.

As CNET's resident security expert, Robert Vamosi has been interviewed on the BBC, CNN, MSNBC, and other outlets to share his knowledge about the latest online threats and to offer advice on personal and corporate security. Listen to his podcast at securitybites.cnet.com or e-mail Robert with your questions and comments.
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Add a Comment (Log in or register) 7 comments
yay!
by shane--2008 September 7, 2007 4:22 PM PDT
another IT disaster brought to by the security people at microsoft!

your suffering. our passion.
Reply to this comment
Wow...
by ice445 September 10, 2007 1:16 PM PDT
This is honestly really sad. This just shows how many people are oblivious to computer security. It also shows how many people don't care at all about others and just want to make money, at whatever the cost. Jesus people, stop making malware. Nobody wants it now, nor ever wanted it.
Reply to this comment
we don't want it go awaya..
by pazsion September 11, 2007 1:09 AM PDT
=D well, considering it started as a marketing tool... as well as severl survailance methods through various companies and individuals.. we will always have some kind of program from somewhere, trying to get in or already on our computers from the second it connects.. some silly theory i guess. Until some one makes a fine piece of software that somehow gets all the crap off.. then we are stuck constntly wipeing and starting new.
wouldn't it be great if
by pazsion September 11, 2007 1:03 AM PDT
This were a good trojan, that made a internet like link between computers through all means, blue tooth wifi modem cable, sat, and shared bandwidth and resources. constantly and free. so that if you had no service of anykinda. semalessly connect. through wi-fi or whatever.

wouldn't that be freaking great? someone should do that. eheh, oh yea give it a brain too, so it can build a human readification machine bwahaha...
Reply to this comment
this will take microsoft many years to fix.
by inachu September 11, 2007 6:18 AM PDT
I am sure their R&D boys and girls are already playing with their copy of the storm worm seeing how it works in a protected environment.......

They are so slow.....
Reply to this comment
Crazy Kim and his ilk strike again...
by Whazzap Doc September 11, 2007 3:48 PM PDT
Last year newspapers repoted that North Korea trained 500 "hackers". I Wonder how many this year...

Do a Google on "hackers" and start thinking if "your" PC is all you should be concerned about...

Viruses etc. are a pain in the *ss, yet even the Storm worm seems like a mere "formatting of one's hard drive" problem compared to the very real and present danger hackers pose...
Reply to this comment
Terminator
by cam001001 September 11, 2007 6:42 PM PDT
Sky.net Anyone?
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