A second person has been arrested in the U.S. in relation to the Blaster worm that infected computers worldwide last month. This time the individual is a juvenile, prosecutors in Seattle said Friday, which in the U.S. typically means under the age of 18.
The juvenile was arrested for "intentionally causing damage and attempting to cause damage to protected computers," the U.S. attorney's office for the Western District of Washington said in a statement. The suspect's identity and details of the investigation weren't released.
The suspect allegedly was involved with the release of the "RPCSDBOT" variant of the Blaster worm, according to the statement. The worm infected computers and attempted to shut down a Microsoft Corp. Web site, the U.S. attorney's office said. The case was investigated by the Washington Cyber Task Force, which includes local law enforcement in the Western District of Washington, the Seattle division of the FBI and the Seattle field division of the Secret Service.
Blaster first appeared on Aug. 11 and exploited a widespread vulnerability in Microsoft's Windows operating system. The RPCSDBOT variant appeared two days later, according to Oliver Friedrichs, a senior manager at Symantec Corp.'s Security Response center.
The variant, when it infected systems, not only attempted to attack a Microsoft Web site, but it also installed a back door called SDBOT that gave the attacker full control over the victim's computer, according to Friedrichs.
The arrest came four weeks after federal law enforcement officials arrested 18-year-old Jeffrey Lee Parson of Hopkins, Minn. Parson was charged with the release of the W32.Blaster-B variant of the original Blaster worm (see story).
A man in Romania has also been arrested for violating that country's cybercrime laws (see story). He allegedly released the Blaster-F worm variant and may face up to 10 years in prison.
The Blaster worm and its variants take advantage of a known vulnerability in a Windows component called the Distributed Component Object Model interface, which handles messages sent using the remote procedure call protocol.
Investigation into the worm is ongoing, according to the U.S. attorney's office.