If you don't, or if you're going, "Oh, yeah, that thing," maybe that's good. The Conficker botnet, a devilishly well-written piece of rogue computer code that threatened ominously to do something undefined on April 1 -- well, it turned out to be one of history's great April-Fool's letdowns.
But it's still out there. Some computer scientists say there are more than 5.5 million computers that are still infected, though they're far away from most Americans. The worst infestations seem to be in Brazil, China and Vietnam.
Take a look at Sean Michael Kerner's piece on InternetNews.com about last week's Black Hat computer security conference in Las Vegas. He quotes Mikko Hypponen, chief research officer at the computer security firm F-Secure:
"The gang behind Conficker are no fools," Hypponen said. "They know their stuff, they know coding, development cycles, crypto and they are clever and they are watching us, their enemy in the security industry."
The headline from the conference seems to have been that security people there couldn't tell all they had learned about Conficker. Everyone expected the perpetrators to have been found out by now.
But there was this one intriguing bit: that perhaps its creators had set it loose...and then left it to run on its own around the Internet.
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