A number of Video iPods have been shipped containing Windows malware,
according to security vendor
Sophos.
In a statement on its web site iPod maker Apple has confirmed that some Video
iPods available for purchase after 12 September 2006 left the firm's contract
manufacturer carrying a malicious file called RavMonE.exe.
Less than one per cent of Video iPods shipped since 12 September are said to
be infected. iPod Nanos and iPod Shuffle devices are not reported to be carrying
the malicious file, which can only be activated on Windows computers.
Graham Cluley, senior technology consultant at Sophos, said: 'It's most
likely that some of the Video iPods were plugged into a Windows PC for testing
purposes at Apple's Chinese-based contractor's manufacturing plant, which is why
only some of them are infected rather than all. However, unfortunately, if you
have bought a Video iPod in the last month there is a chance that it could have
a Windows virus on it.'
'The good news is that if you have kept your anti-virus up-to-date then your
software should have no trouble detecting it before it can do any harm. The even
better news is if you own an Apple computer, since the malware only runs on
Windows, not on Mac OS X,' said Cluley.
Sophos notes that presently Apple is not displaying the correct name for the
malware on its website, instead referring to it as the RavMonE.exe Windows
virus. However it is likely to be a member of the RJump virus family.
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