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Internet Attack Rattles Assumptions

Police and fire dispatchers resorted to paper and pencil after the worm incapacitated a 911 center, and ATMs went down as well.

WASHINGTON, D.C. (AP) -- Disruptions from the weekend attack on the Internet are shaking popular perceptions that vital national services, including banking operations and 911 centers, are largely immune to such attacks.

Damage in some of these areas was worse than many experts had believed possible.

The nation's largest residential mortgage firm, Countrywide Financial, told customers who called Monday that its systems were still suffering. Its Web site, where customers can make payments and check their loans, was closed most of the day.

Countrywide predicted it would be early Tuesday before all its computers were fully repaired and its systems validated for security, spokesman Rick Simon said.

Police and fire dispatchers outside Seattle resorted to paper and pencil for hours after the virus-like attack on the weekend disrupted operations for the 911 center that serves two suburban police departments and at least 14 fire departments.

American Express confirmed that customers couldn't reach its Web site to check credit statements and account balances during parts of the weekend. The attack prevented many customers of Bank of America, one of the largest U.S. banks, and some large Canadian banks from withdrawing money from automatic teller machines Saturday.

President Bush's No. 2 cyber-security adviser, Howard Schmidt, acknowledged that what he called "collateral damage" stunned even the experts who have warned about uncertain effects on the nation's most important electronic systems from mass-scale Internet disruptions.

"This is one of the things we've been talking about for a long time, getting a handle on interdependencies and cascading effects," he said.

Miles McNamee, a top official with the technology industry's Internet early warning center, said the attack was "comparable to the worst of previous denial of service attacks."

The White House and Canadian defense officials confirmed they were investigating how the attack, which started about 12:30 a.m. EST Saturday, could have affected ATM banking and other important networks that should remain immune from traditional Internet outages.

The attack, alternately dubbed "Slammer" or "Sapphire," sought vulnerable computers to infect using a known flaw in popular database software from Microsoft Corp. called "SQL Server 2000."

Microsoft said it has sold 1 million copies of the software, but the flawed code was also included in some popular consumer products from Microsoft, including the latest version of its Office XP collection of business programs.

The attacking software scanned for victim computers so randomly and aggressively that it saturated many of the Internet largest data pipelines, slowing e-mail and Web surfing globally.

Congestion from the Internet attack is almost completely cleared. That has left investigators poring over the blueprints for the Internet worm for clues about its origin and the identity of its author.

Complicating the investigation was how quickly the attack spread across the globe, making it nearly impossible for researchers to find the electronic equivalent of "patient zero," the earliest-infected computers.

"Basically within one minute, the game was over," said Johannes Ullrich of Boston, who runs the D-Shield network of computer monitors.

Experts said blueprints of the attack software were similar to a program published on the Web months ago by David Litchfield of NGS Software, a respected British security expert who last year discovered the flaw in Microsoft's database software that made the attack possible. NGS Software sells a program to improve security for such databases.

The attack software also was similar to computer code published weeks ago on a Chinese hacking Web site by a virus author known as "Lion," who publicly credited Litchfield for the idea.

Litchfield said he deliberately published his blueprints for computer administrators to understand how hackers might use the program to attack their systems.

"Anybody capable of writing such a worm would have found out this information without my sample code," Litchfield said.

Still, Litchfield's disclosure was likely to re-ignite a dispute about how much information to disclose serious vulnerabilities are found in popular software.

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