. . ".exe, .pif"@en . . . . "3.71E10"^^ . "The Sobig worm is considered one of the most destructive worms of its time, with an reported total of $37.1 Billion in damage. It has also set records in spreading ability, including the number of emails sent with itself attached. The worm appeared only a little more than two weeks before Slammer."@en . "Sobig Type Subtype Creator(s) Date Place of Origin Source Language Platform File Type Aliases Family File Size Infection Size Infection Impact Reported Costs MD5 Hash SHA1 Hash CRC32 Hash The Sobig worm is considered one of the most destructive worms of its time, with a reported total of $37.1 billion in damage. It has also set records in spreading ability, including the number of emails sent with itself attached. The worm appeared only a little more than two weeks before Slammer. Sobig.F is the most destructive variant."@en . "C++"@en . "Sobig Type Subtype Creator(s) Date Place of Origin Source Language Platform File Type Aliases Family File Size Infection Size Infection Impact Reported Costs MD5 Hash SHA1 Hash CRC32 Hash The Sobig worm is considered one of the most destructive worms of its time, with a reported total of $37.1 billion in damage. It has also set records in spreading ability, including the number of emails sent with itself attached. The worm appeared only a little more than two weeks before Slammer. Sobig.F is the most destructive variant."@en . . . . . "The Sobig worm was a computer worm that infected millions of Internet-connected, Microsoft Windows computers in August 2003. Sobig is not just a computer worm in the sense that it replicates by itself, but also a Trojan horse that masquerades as something other than malware."@en . . "Worm"@en . . "The Sobig worm is a computer worm that infected millions of Internet-connected, Microsoft Windows computers in August 2003. It spreadg via the Internet as an attachment to infected emails. It also downloads and sets up a backdoor program. The worm itself is a Windows PE EXE file about 64 KB in length (when compressed by TeLock), and written in Microsoft Visual C++."@en . . . . "2003-01-09"^^ . "The Sobig worm was a computer worm that infected millions of Internet-connected, Microsoft Windows computers in August 2003. Sobig is not just a computer worm in the sense that it replicates by itself, but also a Trojan horse that masquerades as something other than malware."@en . "* I-Worm.Sobig.a \n* W32/Sobig.a@MM \n* W32.Sobig.A@mm \n* Win32.HLLM.Reteras \n* W32/Sobig-A \n* Win32/Sobig.A@mm \n* WORM_SOBIG.A \n* Worm/Sobig.A \n* W32/Sobig.A@mm \n* Win32:Sobig \n* I-Worm/Sobig.A \n* Win32.Sobig.A@mm \n* Worm.Sobig.A \n* W32/Sobig \n* Win32/Sobig.A"@en . . "The Sobig worm is considered one of the most destructive worms of its time, with an reported total of $37.1 Billion in damage. It has also set records in spreading ability, including the number of emails sent with itself attached. The worm appeared only a little more than two weeks before Slammer."@en . . "Sobig"@en . . . . . . "Microsoft Windows"@en . "2000000"^^ . . . "The Sobig worm is a computer worm that infected millions of Internet-connected, Microsoft Windows computers in August 2003. It spreadg via the Internet as an attachment to infected emails. It also downloads and sets up a backdoor program. The worm itself is a Windows PE EXE file about 64 KB in length (when compressed by TeLock), and written in Microsoft Visual C++. Although there were indications that tests of the worm were carried out as early as August 2002, Sobig.A was first found in the wild in January 2003. Sobig.B was released on May 2003. It was first called Palyh, but was later renamed to Sobig.B after anti-virus experts discovered it was a new generation of Sobig. Sobig.C was released May 31 and fixed the timing bug in Sobig.B. Sobig.D came a couple of weeks later followed by Sobig.E in June 25. On August 19, Sobig.F became known and set a record in sheer volume of e-mails."@en . . "Sobig"@en . "Microsoft Windows"@en . . . . . .