Conficker remains trouble as infections go unreported
By Asavin Wattanajantra,
The Conficker incidents publicised in Britain are just the “tip of the iceberg”, according to the head of the Conficker Working Group.
Rodney L. Joffe was speaking to IT PRO about a recent report that Ealing Council released, describing how the Conficker worm shut down its systems.
He said that most companies didn’t talk about being hit by Conficker, and that some likely didn’t even recognise that they had been infected by the worm.
Joffe described some of the public and private sector businesses that had “checked in” with the Conficker Working Group after they had been infected with the bug in the last 24 hours, which included one of the largest retail chains in the UK.
He said: “The last couple of days covers the entire spectrum of UK enterprise. In the last 24 hours, banks have checked in, two airports, and eight or nine different councils."
Joffe wouldn’t reveal names of the businesses involved, as it was “inappropriate” - and would also mean that criminals would be able to target the companies vulnerable to an attack.
However, he did reveal that the Conficker Working Group was now supplying information to the Police Central e-crime Unit.
“But there’s a manpower issue,” Joffe warned. “If there are 5,000 organisations in the Met area that have been infected, the e-crime Unit doesn’t have the ability to contact all of them.”
“There are two airports that have been infected. They are going to be looked at before the home ISP provider. There’s a limit to what they can do.”
You may also like...
Sponsored Links
advertisement
You may also like...
Latest Security Analysis & Insight
Who to trust after the VeriSign hack?
Davey Winder questions what data was stolen from VeriSign and wonders why the company hasn't been more forthcoming.
- Striving to solve the security skills crisis
- Would you employ a hacker or malware writer?
- Q&A: Raj Samani, CTO McAfee
- Erase and rewind: the EU and privacy
- My email address is [CENSORED]
- Is there such a thing as a secure tablet?
- 2011: The year in news
- BYOD: Old or new, good or bad?
- Are the cookie laws crumbling already?
Latest Security Reviews
Check Point 2210 Appliance review
Rating: ![]()
advertisement
Most popular
- Will someone rid me of these troublesome Macs?
- Head to Head: Mac OS X 10.7 Lion vs Windows 7
- Head to Head: Office 2010 vs Open Office 3.1
- Nokia Lumia 710 review
- Virgin 100Mbps rollout 'ahead of schedule'
- BT considering Ofcom price cap appeal
- A data shock warning for Orange customers
- Cisco announces 40GbE and 100GbE switching upgrades
- T-Mobile announces 'UK's first' fully unlimited deals
- BT announces FTTP 'on demand'
Latest News Videos in Security
IT PRO Podcast: Are UK data protection laws flawed?
We bring in two experts to talk about the problems with UK data protection law and the way it is managed.
Register for IT PRO
You'll get exclusive member benefits including free whitepapers, downloads, Webinars and weekly newsletters full of the latest IT PRO news, reviews, insight and expertise.

![My email address is [CENSORED]](http://cdn.itpro.co.uk/images/front_picture_library_IT_Pro/dir_227/it_photo_113980_36.jpg)



