Windows worm loose on International Space Station; Mac-using astronauts unaffected

“Nasa [sic] has confirmed that laptops carried to the ISS in July were infected with a virus known as Gammima.AG,” BBC News reports.

MacDailyNews Note: According to Symantec, Gammima.AG is classified as a “Worm” that affects Windows 2000, Windows 95, Windows 98, Windows Me, Windows NT, Windows Server 2003, and Windows XP.

The Beeb continues, “The worm was first detected on earth in August 2007 and lurks on infected machines waiting to steal login names for popular online games. Nasa said it was not the first time computer viruses had travelled into space and it was investigating how the machines were infected.”

MacDailyNews Note: Sheesh, The Beeb. “NASA” is an acronym which stands for National Aeronautics and Space Administration. You know, like “BBC” stands for British Broadcasting Corporation? “Nasa” is as meaningless as “Bbc.”

The Beeb continues, “The laptops infected with the virus were used to run nutritional programs and let the astronauts periodically send e-mail back to Earth… The laptops carried by astronauts reportedly do not have any anti-virus software on them to prevent infection.”

MacDailyNews Take: That the Mac-lovers at NASA allow astronauts use Windows at all is amazing enough, but to not use AV software on Windows is pretty much criminal. Windows is not “mission-critical” software, NASA. Obviously, astronauts should be equipped with MacBook Air units which are safer, thinner, lighter, and better.

The Beeb continues, “Once it has scooped up passwords and login names the Gammima.AG worm virus tries to send them back to a central server… Nasa is working with partners on the ISS to find out how the virus got on to the laptop in the first place.”

Full article here.

[Thanks to MacDailyNews Readers “Switched” for the heads up.]

61 Comments

  1. MDN, Why does your title say “Mac-using astronauts unaffected”? There is nothing in any of the articles saying anything about the Mac? I know that the virus doesn’t affect the mac, and you are assuming that there are Macs on board, but it seems like adding the it to the title implies that someone investigated it and made the point.
    Okay, flame on…

  2. Wow, MDN has really stuck their foot up their collective arse today with their takes showing their obvious ignorance regarding the UK.

    Hey MDN: Probably you should take a vacation … to the UK … so you won’t appear so vapid and idiotic in the future.

  3. Ever hear announcers on ‘The Beeb” pronounce “Los Angeles”? The pronounce it “Los Angeleeeeeeze” as if somehow they know how to pronounce it better than Americans. And Brits are the first ones to get pissy if we don’t pronounce “Salisbury” as “Soulzbury”.
    At the beginning of the Iraq war, some goof-ball Brit reporter pronounce the Tigris River as the “Teeeegris”. We all know that Brits are obsessed with class and appearances, so I figured this nincompoop was trying to sound clever – as if somehow HE knew better and was of course, upper class. A couple days latter he apparently fell off the roof of a hotel (maybe someone pushed him..)

  4. FWIW, I doubt NASA is flying stock Dells on the ISS for any length of time. The radiation environment is such that consumer quality equipment would crash unexpectedly and at irregular intervals. (I wonder if they could correlate it with passage through the South Atlantic Anomaly?) Even Apple recommends not using their machines in this kind of environment.

    No doubt many of you have heard the the MERs (Mars Exploration Rovers) Opportunity and Spirit run with PPC 601 – class processors? This is true, but they aren’t the same processors found in the old PowerMac 7100s. They’re radiation-hardened.

    Nevertheless, a Windows machine used for email without anti-virus infected with a worm by NASA at the ISS? That’s priceless, and free advertising for Apple to boot.

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