Account Locker


· Overview ·
· Origins ·
· Operation ·
· Detection and Removal ·
· Research ·



Overview

Vendor Notes:

from the doc: 'You Enjoy !!!!!!! Madmax Lock Account for 12 hourse

Alias:

Black Out-Account Locker, New AOL [McAfee], Trojan.Win32.VB.ea

Category:

DoS: An exploit whose purpose is to deny somebody the use of the service: namely to crash or hang a program or the entire system. Examples of DoS attacks include flooding the victim with more traffic than can be handled; flooding a service (like IRC) with more events than it can handle bomb; crashing a TCP/IP stack by sending corrupt packets; crashing a service by interacting with it in an unexpected way; or hanging a system by causing it to go into an infinite loop. For example, the Ping of Death exploit crashed machines by sending illegally fragmented packets at a victim. A common word for DoS is ""nuke"", which was first popularized by the WinNuke program.

Variants:

  • Account Locker 3
  • Similar Pests:

    DoS

    Origins

    Group:

    Fatal-Instinct

    By This Group:

    Account F__ker 1.00 ·

    EMail:

    persian_gentelman@yahoo.com

    URL:

    http://www.angelfire.com/80s/madmax/

    Date of Origin:

    Variants from February, 2000 to November, 2003

    Operation

    Storage Required:

  • Account Locker: at least 77 KB
  • Account Locker 3: at least 61 KB
  • Detection and Removal

    Automatic Removal:

    PestPatrol detects this.

    PestPatrol removes this.



    Manual Removal:

    Follow these steps to remove Account Locker from your machine. Begin by backing up your registry and your system, and/or setting a Restore Point, to prevent trouble if you make a mistake.
    Stop Running Processes:

    Kill these running processes with Task Manager:

    Remove Files:

    Remove these files (if present) with Windows Explorer:

    Research

    File Analyses:

    More Info:

  • AllTheWeb, AltaVista, AOL Search, Ask Jeeves, Google, HotBot, Lycos, LookSmart, MSN, Yahoo!
  • Research By:

  • PestPatrol's Pest Research Center
  • Last Revised:

    January 24, 2005