RFC 1135 (rfc1135) – Page 1 of 33
Helminthiasis of the Internet
Alternative Format: Original Text Document
Network Working Group J. Reynolds Request for Comments: 1135 ISI December 1989 The Helminthiasis of the Internet Status of this Memo This memo takes a look back at the helminthiasis (infestation with, or disease caused by parasitic worms) of the Internet that was unleashed the evening of 2 November 1988. This RFC provides information about an event that occurred in the life of the Internet. This memo does not specify any standard. Distribution of this memo is unlimited. Introduction ----- "The obscure we see eventually, the completely apparent takes longer." ----- Edward R. Murrow The helminthiasis of the Internet was a self-replicating program that infected VAX computers and SUN-3 workstations running the 4.2 and 4.3 Berkeley UNIX code. It disrupted the operations of computers by accessing known security loopholes in applications closely associated with the operating system. Despite system administrators efforts to eliminate the program, the infection continued to attack and spread to other sites across the United States. This RFC provides a glimpse at the infection, its festering, and cure. The impact of the worm on the Internet community, ethics statements, the role of the news media, crime in the computer world, and future prevention will be discussed. A documentation review presents four publications that describe in detail this particular parasitic computer program. Reference and bibliography sections are also included in this memo. 1. The Infection ----- "Sandworms, ya hate 'em, right??" ----- Michael Keaton, Beetlejuice Defining "worm" versus "virus" A "worm" is a program that can run independently, will consume the resources of its host from within in order to maintain itself, and can propagate a complete working version of itself on to other machines. Reynolds