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New Delhi: The Kama Sutra is giving computer professionals across the world sleepless nights. But not in the way you think.
A computer virus, scheduled to strike on February 3, Kama Sutra will corrupt documents with the most common file types, including doc, pdf and zip files.
And here's the bad news: India will be the most affected.
Speaking to TOI, managing director of Centre for Anti Virus Technology, Pune, Kailash Katkar, said: ''This virus first emerged on January 16. It has already crashed 300,000 computers across the globe. However, its worst effect will be felt on February 3. We feel the virus specially targets computers with the Norton anti-virus software. That puts India, Peru and Italy, where this software is used in abundance, in grave risk. The only way people can save their files is by updating their anti-virus software before February 3.''
Also known as CME-24, MyWife or BlackWorm, the virus' main purpose will be to destroy all Microsoft Word, Excel, Access and PowerPoint documents and Adobe Acrobat and Photoshop files on all hard drives connected to an infected PC. Besides dis abling anti-virus softwares, Kama Sutra will also raid address books to find e-mail addresses to send itself to.
Microsoft has issued an advisory, warning people about the worm, which affects most versions of its Windows operating system. The virus will spread by making people open attachments on e-mail messages that are infected with the destructive code. The subject lines and body text of the various messages will vary. But all of them will falsely claim that pornographic videos and pictures are attached with it.
What's baffling experts most is that unlike other e-mail worms, Kama Sutra is detached from any profit motive, destruction being its only job. Victims will be able to tell they've been infected if they clicked on an e-mail attachment and their keyboard and mouse freeze up, forcing them to reboot. Disinfection will require reinstalling an anti-virus programme updated to protect against this worm, then scanning to make sure it has been purged.
Another expert said: ''Because big corporations have tighter email defences, small businesses will be hit hard. But big companies won't be immune. The worm is designed to inject file-deletion instructions onto corporate servers. It does so via systems that share data with employees logging on to corporate systems from remote locations.''

Kama Sutra virus may strike on Fri

San Fransisco: A destructive worm posing as a pornographic e-mail may already have infected hundreds of thousands of computers and could erase many everyday files on February 3, security experts warned on Tuesday.
The 'Kama Sutra' worm, which targets popular Microsoft Corp, Adobe Systems Inc and ZIP files, is a threat because many users will not know the virus has infected their computers until it is too late, security experts said.
They also estimate that the worm — which spreads by e-mailing itself to addresses in an infected computer's mailbox — may already have slipped onto 275,000 to 500,000 machines and is now simply waiting to obliterate files on Friday.
The virus, also known as Grew.A or MyWife, tricks users by appearing as an email attachment with subject lines such as "Hot Movie," "give me a kiss" and "Miss Lebanon 2006."
Some variations refer to the ancient Kama Sutra guide to elaborate sexual positionsin order to attract attention and convince victims to open. Reuters

Source: IANS.

New Delhi, February 2: If a group of defence scientists and automobile engineers has its way, people could soon be driving in India in a hydrogen fuel cell-powered mini car that could double up as a power generator.

The DRDO-Reva hybrid vehicle combines a car built by Bangalore-based Reva Electric Car Company with a fuel cell developed by scientists of the state-run Defence Research and Development Organisation. Running it could cost as little as 40 paise a kilometre, say its developers.

"DRDO and Reva concluded an agreement about two months ago to develop the car, and we have already built the prototype," said S.C. Sharma, a scientist associated with the fuel cell programme at DRDO's Naval Materials Research Laboratory near Mumbai.

"DRDO has been working on fuel cells for about 10 years. This car currently has a mileage of 20 km per litre of methanol while running on its fuel cell," Sharma told IANS at the Defexpo 2006 where the car is displayed for the first time.

Although the development of the hybrid car could take up to a year, Sharma and Reva's V.M. Suresh, who is associated with the project, said it would have another use in electricity-starved areas in India's rural hinterland - it can be used as a generator to power a small home.

The fuel cell - which Sharma described as a "small power plant" - is silent and produces very little emissions. The green-and-black prototype, for which the chassis of the standard Reva car has been stretched so that the bulky fuel cell can be accommodated at its rear, has been attracting many curious visitors at the Defexpo.

While the standard Reva electric car has a range of 80 km, the hybrid will initially have a range of 120 km and this could be further extended. The hybrid's top speed is 65 km per hour.
When the car is switched on, it draws power from its built-in battery for the initial 30 minutes or so as methanol and water are converted into hydrogen to power the fuel cell.

"The fuel cell then continuously charges the battery and helps extend the vehicle's range and allows it to be operated in places where electricity is not readily available," said Sharma.

Suresh said it would be very cheap to run the hybrid car, given the subsidies offered by the Indian government to popularise methanol as an alternative green fuel.

"Methanol costs only about Rs.8 to Rs.10 a litre and the car has a very good mileage," he remarked.

More importantly, the DRDO-Reva uses a phosphoric acid fuel cell, which can run on "dirty hydrogen" or hydrogen with a strong content of gases like carbon dioxide - something that Sharma noted is ideal for polluted cities like Delhi.