Digital Photo Frame replies
Several days ago a reporter from the San Francisco Chronicle contacted me because she had read my diary regarding the possible contamination of digital photo frames sold around the Christmas holidays. These frames were purchased from a variety of stores around the country and from what we can gather there are different manufacturers and models. It has not been an easy task trying to pull all of the details together and is perhaps one of the mysteries that will never be solved to most everyone’s satisfaction.
So here goes:
At this point the only 3 that have been identified by name are the Insignia 10.4”, the ADS 8” and Uniek brand.
Where were the frames purchased?
There are many different “theories” on just what infection has occurred. If you do a Google search for digital photo frame infections you will come up today with 70,400 hits. I have not looked at all of the articles of course. However the ones that I have looked at all boil down to basically a malware infection. As for identifying exactly which one you may have, that is a tough one. Unfortunately, each of the anti-virus manufacturers has their own twist to it and each has given it their own name. It would be so nice for many reasons if we could get this part of our world standardized. It has been identified as Autorun.e, Autorun.worm, and Mocmex. Some of the individual components are identified with additional names. I wish I could give you a list of what files to look for but I can’t. First of all the lists that I have seen are many and secondly, this list may change continuously. The nature of many of these worm outbreaks is that they change their file names (identity) continuously in order to avoid detection. To actually print this list would be irresponsible I think because it may give a false sense of security if you don’t find one of these files on your disk. I would like to urge everyone to check out their anti-virus programs to make sure that they are current and that the definitions are up to date. One of the reports that I have read says that this infection may disable your anti-virus programs and/or your firewall programs. Your best line of defense is prevention. Anti-virus, anti-spyware software and firewalls are your computers best friend if used correctly. Just remember, in most cases these programs expire every year and need to be renewed on an annually.
The digital picture frames are not the only devices that are potential candidates for infection. Any device that uses a USB connection, any device that allows data whether images or files to be stored, any device that connects 2 devices together to share data may be at risk. We have had reports in the past of hard drives (both external and internal), USB Sticks/Flash Drives/Thumb Drives, Camera cards, iPods, MP3 players, etc being infected. Again to try to determine where the initial infection occurred is nearly impossible.
I wish that we could require all of our drivers on the Information Highway to have a license to operate. I wish that we could require all of our Internet users to take a course on Netiquette. But we can’t, so all we can do is educate when we can and help people to understand the power they have in their hands.
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