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[Re: Jdbgmgr.exe file hoax]



THIS INFO CAN BE FOUND ON THE F-SECURE SITE.

PLEASE, IF YOU SEND AROUND THESE WARNINGS, MAKE SURE IT IS A REAL VIRUS
WARNING!
PAUL


Hoax Warnings

NAME: jdbgmgr.exe virus hoax
ALIAS: Teddy Bear hoax

NOTE: A worm has been found that actually uses the jdbgmgr.exe filename! For
more information, please go to:

http://www.f-secure.com/v-descs/recory.shtml

NOTE: On 21st of May 2002, a new virus using this hoax was found. The virus
sends messages coming apparently from Symantec corporation and contains a
warning on the JDBGMGR hoax - plus a virus attached to it.

In April 2002 there appeared a hoax message concerning a new virus that was
reportedly discovered in Windows utility JDBGMGR.EXE. The jdbgmgr is a
standard windows component that is found in every windows installation, it
is used as Java debugger manager in Microsoft Java runtime engine. We
checked several versions of this utility from Windows installations and
found nothing malicious in them.

Please ignore this hoax or anything similar warning about jdbgmgr.exe and
don't pass it on.

If you have deleted jdbgmgr.exe, please see Microsoft knowledgebase article
Q322993 for instructions how to restore your system:
http://support.microsoft.com/default.aspx?scid=kb;en-us;Q322993

Please note that some e-mail worms (for example, Magistr) might sometimes
send an infected JDBGMGR.EXE in an e-mail attachment, but this infection is
caused by Magistr not JDBGMGR by itself. So the bottom line is, if you
receive JDBGMGR.EXE or any other windows component by email, it is most
probably a file infected by a virus. If you find JDBGMGR.EXE from your
system directory, it is most probably a clean file.

A variation of this hoax is known to exist which relates the jdbgmgr.exe
file to the Bugbear worm

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