Into the Void

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Happy Valentine's Day

February 14th, 2010

Valentine's Day spoof card.  I got a good laugh out of this! on Twitpic

Valentine’s Day spoof card. I got a good laugh out of this!

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Despair.com: Parody Heart Generator

February 14th, 2008

Despair.com: Parody Heart Generator

Just wanted to wish you all a Happy Valentines Day.

Ok, I know that there are some valentines nasties going around. I even blogged it. This looks like them. It’s not. Despair.com is one of my favorite web sites.

It’s a candy heart slogan generator that creates a candy heart picture for you to send to your friends. Enjoy!

Nut Case Heart

Last date candy hearts

Heart Worm Heart

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Happy St. Valentine’s Day

February 12th, 2008

Two new worms use St. Valentine’s Day as bait

PandaLabs, Panda Security’s laboratory for detecting and analyzing malware, has detected two new worms, Nuwar.OL and Valentin.E, which use the topic of St. Valentine’s Day to spread. I suppose you could call them love bugs.

Love BugBoth Nuwar.OL and Valentin.E arrive by email with Valentine-themed subject lines. They may even appear to have been sent by someone you know.

The first one of these worms, Nuwar.OL, uses an email with subjects like “I Love You Soo Much,” “Inside My Heart” or “You’re In My Dreams” to trick the recipient into opening the website that downloads it. The webpage is very simple – a romantic greeting card with a large pink Valentine’s Day heart. Surprise!

Once it has infected a computer, Nuwar.OL spreads itself by sending out a large number of emails to people in the user’s email address book. This activity can slow down both the infected computer and the local network.

Valentin.E also spreads by email. Watch out for messages with subjects like “Searching for true Love” or “True Love” and an attached file called “friends4u.scr.” If you run the file, Valentin.E shows a new desktop background to distract you while it makes several copies of itself on the computer and emails copies of itself to all your friends.

“Both cases are clear examples of social engineering techniques used to spread malware. They use attractive subjects – Valentine’s Day greeting cards, romantic desktop themes, etc. – to entice users to run [email] attachments or click links that ultimately download malware onto their computers,” explains Luis Corrons, Technical Director of PandaLabs.

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