By: TwitterButtons.com

Internet doomsday virus appears to fizzle

The so-called net doomsday virus with the potential to black out tens of thousands of computers worldwide gave the impression to create no major issues Monday within the 1st hours once a fix expired.
Security corporations reported no important outages linked to the DNS Changer virus, as several net service suppliers have either implemented a fix or contacted customers with steps to wash their computers.
The problem stems from malware referred to as DNS Changer, that was created by a cybercriminals to redirect net traffic by hijacking the domain name systems (DNS) of internet browsers.
The ring behind the DNS Changer was finish off last year by the US Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), Estonian police and alternative law enforcement agencies, once infecting some four million computers worldwide.
Nearly 300,000 computers gave the impression to be still infected as of June, consistent with specialists monitoring the matter.
On Monday, temporary servers came upon by the FBI to direct net traffic normally, even for infected computers, were finish off.
But security specialists said most net users and suppliers have had time to figure around or fix the matter.
"Many world operators are keeping their DNS Changer victims on-line, even once FBI stopped. we have a tendency to don't expect abundant noise concerning this these days," said Mikko Hypponen, chief analysis officer at the Finland-based firm F-Secure, during a Twitter message.
Johannes Ullrich of the SANS Security Institute said that for computers running Windows, the pc "may really revert to the default settings once the DNS server is turned off."
He added, that "if you used the dangerous DNS server, chances are high that that numerous entities tried to notify you. Google as an example ought to have shown you a banner."