EDIT: Popular file-share utilities contain Trojans

http://www.grokster.com/files/trojan-remove.exe
Popular file-sharing software from Grokster and the Limewire Gnutella Client contain the W32.DlDer Trojan, Symantec revealed last week.

According to several The Reg readers, the KaZaA utility also contains the same infection.

The Trojan here is a spyware application masquerading as a lottery game called ClickTilUWin. When installing the Grokster or Limewire software, and some versions of KaZaA, the user is given an option to enable the ClickTilUWin feature. Regardless of whether one accepts or declines, the Trojan is installed.

Grokster has offered an explanation of this embarrassing oversight on its Web site:

"Some of you may be wondering why this Trojan was in our installer at all," the company speculates wisely.

"We sometimes bundle advertiser applications with our installer in order to help pay for our costs here at Grokster. We are normally given an installer from the advertiser which we run during the installation of Grokster. We have no access to the source code of these third-party installers and so we rely on what our advertisers say these programs do. To the best of our knowledge, this particular advertiser simply placed a link to a free online lottery on the desktop. We were never informed that it installed or was a Trojan."

The company has released a utility which it says will remove the Trojan, and promises to have a clean version of its software available in a matter of days.

Those who prefer to see to their own Trojan removal need only search for a hidden directory under their \Windows directory called \Explorer. Simply delete the \Windows\Explorer directory, along with the companion file Dlder.exe in the \Windows directory.

The Trojan is not destructive, but does phone home to the ClickTilUWin Web site with user data which, presumably, is used for marketing purposes, or is perhaps forwarded to RIAA headquarters to assemble a database of copyright scofflaws.
5,681 views 2 replies
Reply #1 Top
Not surprising. Anyone that runs any anti-spyware monitoring software and has tried installing just about any of this type of program will know they they are crawling with spyware. The only difference now is that the major antivirus vendors have decided to call one particular piece of spyware a virus. It is my opinion that all spyware should be considered virulent.

AJ
Reply #2 Top
Funny this should come up, since I recently became interested in anti-spyware programs and discovered that another semi-popular file sharing app is infected with this sort of junk. I found several programs installed on my computer that I had never agreed to the installing of. Of course this Grokster has denied knowing anything about this, not unlike a drunk driver would prefer not to claim that he was in the driver's seat at the time of an accident. Consequently, when I removed the spyware, iMesh ceased to function. I agree with you, too, since the technical definition of a virus is anything that is self-replicating, To me, anything that installs itself without your knowledge or permission is, by nature, self-replicating, and hence, is also a virus.