Mydoom, Email Worms, and Backups That Actually Help
If you run support for a home network or a small office, 2004 has been a constant lesson in how fast email malware spreads once one person clicks the wrong attachment. Mydoom was the headline name, but it lived in the same noisy ecosystem as Bagle and Netsky. Different family, same outcome: crowded mail queues, angry contacts, and half a day lost to cleanup. What We Saw in Early 2004 Mydoom.A appeared in January and spread faster than most AV vendors could ship signatures. Variants targeted high-profile domains — including SCO and Microsoft — with DDoS traffic from infected bots. Mydoom.B followed within days with tweaked behavior. By spring, IT forums were full of the same question: “Why is our mail server queueing ten thousand outbound messages?” ...