World Cup soccer fans should be aware of a new worm being circulated by e-mail with the German-language message “WM-Tickets” or “Weltmeisterschaft,” security vendor Sophos warned Wednesday. The e-mail contains an attachment, which, when opened, activates the W32/Zasran-A worm. The worm is programmed to send itself to addresses stored in Microsoft’s Outlook address book and manipulate security settings to give hackers access to other personal information stored in users’ PCs. Additional information is available here.The Zasran-A worm is the second World Cup-related virus detected in May, with the games scheduled to kick off June 9. On May 4, the Baden-Wurttemberg State Bureau of Criminal Investigation (LKA) warned of an e-mail with a link to a self-extracting Excel file that claims to contain the game plan for the soccer tournament. The German-language e-mail contains the message “Fussball Weltmeisterschaft 2006 in Deutschland” (2006 World Cup Soccer Tournament in Germany) and the link “googlebook.exe.” When clicked, the link installs a Trojan horse on users’ PCs. The Trojan program appears to have originated from a server in the United States, according to LKA officials. Sophos urges users to be extra vigilant against virus threats as excitement grows over the World Cup games.Seemingly harmless World Cup screensavers, spreadsheets and electronic wall charts are ideal vehicles to spread viruses and worms, according to the company.The World Cup has prompted viruses in the past, and will likely in the future as well. Ahead of the World Cup games in France in 1998, the WM97/ZMK-J virus asked PC users to gamble on who the winner could be, and if the user didn’t choose the right team, it triggered a warhead that was capable of erasing all data on the hard drive, according to Sophos.Last year, the world’s governing soccer body, FIFA (Federation Internationale de Football Association), warned fans and others that its name was being abused in a global phishing scam. Several lottery companies had sent unsolicited, official-looking e-mail around the globe, announcing that recipients had won a lottery and requesting personal data, including bank account information, for them to claim the prize money. The lotteries claimed to be organized on behalf of, or in association with, FIFA as well as the German organizers of the World Cup and their South African counterparts for the 2010 games. -John Blau, IDG News ServiceFor related content from CIO sister publication CSO, read No Hooligans, Danke.For related news coverage, read Trojan Horse Lurks in World Cup Tournament E-Mail. Related content feature Key IT initiatives reshape the CIO agenda While cloud, cybersecurity, and analytics remain top of mind for IT leaders, a shift toward delivering business value is altering how CIOs approach key priorities, pushing transformative projects to the next phase. By Mary Pratt May 30, 2023 10 mins IT Strategy IT Leadership opinion Managing IT right starts with rightsizing IT for value While there are few universals when it comes to saying unambiguously what ‘managing IT right’ looks like, knowing how to navigate the limitless possibilities of IT is surely one. By Thornton May May 30, 2023 6 mins Digital Transformation IT Strategy IT Leadership brandpost Designing the campus of the future starts with high-quality 10Gbps connectivity By Huawei May 30, 2023 4 mins Network Architect Networking Devices Networking feature Red Hat embraces hybrid cloud for internal IT The maker of OpenShift has leveraged its own open container offering to migrate business-critical apps to AWS as part of a strategy to move beyond facilitating hybrid cloud for others and capitalize on the model for itself. By Paula Rooney May 29, 2023 5 mins CIO 100 Technology Industry Hybrid Cloud Podcasts Videos Resources Events SUBSCRIBE TO OUR NEWSLETTER From our editors straight to your inbox Get started by entering your email address below. Please enter a valid email address Subscribe