Windows Vista first virus appears

Less than a week taken to exploit beta OS.

An Austrian hacker earned the dubious distinction of writing what are thought to be the first known viruses for Microsoft's Windows Vista operating system.

The viruses take advantage of a new command shell, codenamed Monad, that was included in the Windows Vista beta code. They were published on a virus-writing tutorial written for an underground hacker group calling itself the Ready Ranger Liberation Front, and take advantage of security vulnerabilities in the new command shell.

Unlike the traditional Windows graphical user interface, which relies heavily on the mouse for navigation, command shells allow users to use powerful text-based commands, much like Windows' predecessor, DOS.

The viruses were written by a hacker calling himself "Second Part To Hell," and published just days after Monad was publicly released by Microsoft, according to Mikko Hypponen, chief research officer at F-Secure. Second Part To Hell is the pseudonym of an Austrian-based hacker who also goes by the name Mario, Hypponen said.

Because of its sophistication, the new command shell offers new opportunities for hackers, Second Part To Hell wrote in the tutorial. "Monad will be like Linux's BASH (Bourne Again Shell) - that means a great number of commands and functions," he wrote. "We will be able to make as huge and complex scripts as we do in Linux."

F-Secure has named the virus family Danom (Monad in reverse). After examining the code, Hypponen said that the Danom family is disruptive, but not capable of causing significant damage to Windows users. "These are proof of concept viruses," he said, "Where virus writers want to break new ground and write the first viruses for a new platform."

Most security experts had not expected to see a Windows Vista virus so soon, Hypponen said. "The only surprise here is that it came so early," he said. "It's been eight days since the beta of the operating system was out."

Still, Danom's release does raise questions about whether or not Microsoft should enable the Monad shell by default in Windows Vista.

Because Monad's scripting capabilities will only be used by advanced users, Hypponen believes Microsoft should not offer the software as part of the standard Windows Vista package when it becomes commercially available at the end of 2006. This would make the software less prevalent, and therefore less attractive to virus writers, he said.

Microsoft "got burned," by including similar software, called Windows Script Host, by default in its Windows 2000 operating system, he said. "Since it was on the system, all the virus writers were exploiting it," he said.



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