Flawed McAfee update hits TVNZ

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Cripples Windows XP machines with endless reboots after critical system file quarantined
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A flawed McAfee antivirus update sent enterprise administrators scrambling today as the new signatures quarantined a crucial Windows system file, crippling an unknown number of Windows XP computers, according to messages on the company's support forum.

The forum has since gone offline.

Computerworld understands TVNZ is one prominent local victim of the rogue update with several hundred PCs, around 30 percent ot the company's fleet, affected.

Meagan Richards, of TVNZ corporate affairs, says a couple of hundred PCs were affected at the broadcaster and staff have been working since 4 am to restore them "PC by PC".

Richards said the job was almost complete when spoken to at 9.15 am today.

However, another source put the number of PCs hit at TVNZ at close to 1,000 and says the issue started around 2.30 when a support machine rebooted.

McAfee confirmed it had pushed the faulty update to users earlier today. "McAfee is aware that a number of customers have incurred a false positive error due to incorrect malware alerts on Wednesday, April 21," said company spokesman Joris Evers in an email reply to questions. "The problem occurs with the 5958 virus definition file (DAT) that was released on April 21 at 2:00 pm. GMT+1 (6:00 am Pacific)."

According to users on McAfee's support forum, today's update flagged Windows' "svchost.exe" file, a generic host process for services that run from other DLLs (dynamic link libraries).

"HOW THE F*** do they put a DAT out that kills a *VITAL* system process?" asked Jeff Gerard on one thread. "This is goddamn ridiculous," added Gerard, who identified himself as a senior security administrator with Wawanesa Mutual Insurance Company of Winnipeg, Manitoba, in Canada. "Great work McAfee! GRRRRRRRRRRR."

As of 3:30 pm ET, McAfee's support forum was offline, with a message reading "The McAfee Community is experiencing unusually large traffic which may cause slow page loads. We apologise for any inconvenience this may cause."

Both users and McAfee said that the flawed update had crippled Windows XP Service Pack 3 (SP3) machines, but not PCs running Vista or Windows 7. "Our initial investigation indicates that the error can result in moderate to significant performance issues on systems running Windows XP Service Pack 3," acknowledged Evers.

Affected PCs have displayed a shutdown error or blue error screen, then gone into an endless cycle of rebooting, users claimed.

McAfee reacted by warning users not to download today's update if they haven't already, and by posting recovery instructions and a signature update to suppress the defective one seeded to users earlier. "Apply the EXTRA.DAT to all potentially affected systems as soon as possible," the company recommended. "For systems that have already encountered this issue, start the computer in Safe Mode and apply the EXTRA.DAT. After applying the EXTRA.DAT, restore the affected files from Quarantine." Unfortunately, those instructions and the suppression EXTRA.DAT update file are not currently available, again because McAfee's support site has gone dark.

Instead, users can reach the instructions and EXTRA.DAT file from elsewhere on McAfee's site .

"The faulty update has been removed from McAfee download servers for corporate users, preventing any further impact on those customers," Evers said. "We are not aware of significant impact on consumer customers and believe we have significantly limited such occurrence."

The company has yet to produce an updated signature definition file to replace the one that crippled computers. A month ago, a BitDefender update clobbered 64-bit Windows machines. In 2005, Trend Micro released a flawed signature update that slowed PCs to a crawl, and McAfee is far from the first antivirus vendor to ship a flawed signature update. In May 2007, a Symantec definition file crippled thousands of Chinese computers when the software mistook two critical Windows .dll files for malware.

McAfee is working on helping customers affected by the rogue update, said Evers. "McAfee apologises for any inconvenience to our customers," he added.

Comments
McStuffup! Bugger aye... not great on the record for such a smart company... enter other players and perhaps a more holistic approach to security
Posted by McDonalds at 17:20:57 on April 24, 2010

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Nope SVCHOST.exe fixes all once it has been replaced, including NIC issues.
Posted by Ryan at 11:35:33 on April 23, 2010

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Auto-Immune Attack This is what happens when you try to patch up vulnerabilities in a complex system by adding yet another layer of complexity on top. Far better to design a less vulnerable system to begin with.
Posted by Lawrence D'Oliveiro at 11:33:56 on April 22, 2010

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McAfee Fiasco It is not Windows SP3 specific, it can be other SP's as well

The Start button/ toolbar can be minimized as a thin horizontal line at the bottom of the screen. You will need to right-click on the line, select Toolbars and tick Qickl Launch. Then you can drag up the Toolbar

Then you may find TCP/IP is damaged. After downloading the new DAT, you may need to deinstall and reinstall the NIC driver, then run WINSOCKFIX, then reinstall the TCP/IP configuration.....

Wait there's more....you may find SVCHOST.EXE is damaged. You will need to copy a SVCHOST.EXE from a working computer across to the damaged computer to get it going.


What a shambles......
Posted by Anonymous at 11:29:38 on April 22, 2010

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