Information Security News mailing list archives

US and UK arrests in computer worm probe


From: InfoSec News <isn () c4i org>
Date: Mon, 10 Feb 2003 02:31:42 -0600 (CST)

http://www.theregister.co.uk/content/56/29221.html

By John Leyden
Posted: 06/02/2003 

Two UK men were arrested this morning following police raids in the UK
and US aimed at dismantling an international hacker group believed to
have created a virulent computer worm.

Officers from the Durham Constabulary arrested a 19 year-old
electrician and a 21 year-old unemployed man after seizing evidence
related to computer and drugs offences during a raid on two addresses
in County Durham this morning.

The pair are being interviewed today by officers of the UK's National
Hi-Tech Crime Unit (NHTCU).

Police believe the two UK based men are members of an international
hacking group calling themselves the "THr34t-Krew".

The group has created an Internet worm, called the TK worm, which
infected approximately 18,000 computers around the world, according to
a statement by the NHTCU.

Investigators estimate the worm caused disruption and damage to
computer systems in the UK and overseas estimated at £5.5 million.

The operation against the THr34t-Krew group was jointly planned by
officers from Durham Constabulary and the US multi-agency CATCH team
(Computer and Technology Crime Hi-Tech Response Team).

The California-based CATCH team consists of representatives from the
United States Secret Service, Department of Justice, and the FBI among
others.

While UK police were searching homes in County Durham, a simultaneous
search warrant was executed at an address in Illinois, USA, where
additional evidence in the case was seized and one man arrested.

None of the arrests are connected to the recent SQL Slammer Worm, the
NHTCU states.

What the heck is the TK worm?

Antivirus experts we contacted were not immediately familiar with the
TK worm, so (for now) we need to rely on a police description of the
malicious code which first came to the attention of the NCTCU in mid-
January.

The worm known as the TK worm has been found to be present in a number
of computers in the UK. The cost of the disruption is estimated at
£5.5m.

Once connected to the Internet, the infected computer connects to a
number of computers under the control of the THr34t-Krew, who are able
to send commands to the infected hosts. These commands could range
from scanning other computers for vulnerabilities, starting
Distributed Denial of Service attacks on other computers and web
sites. The TK worm is self-replicating and is able to spread itself
across the Internet distributing itself to other computers.

A search on Google for THr34t-Krew reveals one user's experiences of
dealing with this worm but not much else.



-
ISN is currently hosted by Attrition.org

To unsubscribe email majordomo () attrition org with 'unsubscribe isn'
in the BODY of the mail.


Current thread: