New Virus Can Infect Picture Files

"Our concern is more for what might be coming," says Vincent Gullotto, head antivirus researcher at McAfee Security, which produces top-selling antivirus software. "Potentially no file type could be safe."

As with any computer threat, the best way to protect a computer is to have updated antivirus software.

McAfee researchers received the virus from its creator. Virus writers typically send their new work to researchers--as well as fellow virus writers--as a way of bragging about their skills. Gullotto declined to identify the author. McAfee antivirus software can detect and remove Perrun.

Perrun is known as a proof-of-concept virus, and does not cause damage. But Gullotto says he fears other virus writers may use Perrun as a template to create a more destructive version.

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Until now, viruses infected program files--files that can be run on their own. Data files, like movies, music, text and pictures, were safe from infection. While earlier viruses deleted or modified data files, Perrun is the first to infect them.

Perrun inserts portions of the virus code into the picture file. When the picture is viewed, it can infect other pictures. If the author wished, the virus could delete files on the computer or perform other mischief.

The virus still needs modifications to become dangerous, because it arrives as a program file that can be attached to an e-mail. Security experts always warn against opening programs sent as e-mail attachments.

Once run, the file installs a program onto the victim's hard drive that can infect pictures. When a computer user clicks on a picture file with the extension .JPG--a common picture file found on the Web--the picture is infected before it appears. Because the picture displays normally, Gullotto says, the victim may not know there's anything wrong.

The normal display of the picture may give this new family of viruses a leg up on its predecessors. Two viruses that hit computers last year promised to show pictures of tennis star Anna Kournikova and a "Naked Wife."Even though they failed to show the photos, they infected millions of computers and clogged up e-mail systems worldwide.

Other viruses, such as variants of the infamous LoveLetter program or SirCam, destroyed picture files or sent them and other files to random recipients.

In its current form, an infected JPEG file cannot infect another computer on its own. But Gullotto says there's no reason a virus writer couldn't make the picture itself able to infect other computers.

That evolution should make computer users think twice about sending pictures--or any other media--over the Internet, Gullotto says.

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