Seattle/London, Feb 02: The MyDoom Internet worm on Sunday knocked down the Web site of a small software company by bombarding it with a flood of data as Microsoft Corp. prepared for a similar, planned attack by the virus-like program this week.
The SCO Group Inc., a software company that has drawn the ire of Linux advocates for trying to collect license fees for the freely available software system, confirmed MyDoom had knocked its Web site, http://www.sco.com, out of commission.
After defending the site in the early stage of the attack, SCO shut its site down entirely.
"Rather than try to continue to fight, we felt it was more advantageous to bring the site down and make that bandwidth available or other users," said SCO spokesman Blake Stowell, adding that the company would get the site up and running again on Monday.
SCO and Microsoft, which is being targeted by a variant of the MyDoom worm, have each offered a bounty of USD 250,000 for information leading to the capture of the author of the malicious program.
The world's largest software maker said was it preparing for an attack by the variant worm, called MyDoom.B, which security experts have said will happen on Tuesday.
"Microsoft remains diligent," a company spokesman said.
The speed and severity of the attack surprised security officials, although there were no other reports of outages or slowdowns elsewhere online due to the worm.
But experts warned that the main threat remained to unsuspecting recipients of the worm, which spreads by spamming itself to millions e-mail accounts around the globe.
"At this particular point people shouldn't lose sight of the fact that the virus is still spreading," said Vincent Gullotto, vice president of the anti-virus emergency response team at Network Associates Inc.
Bureau Report