This type of worm is embedded in an email attachment, and spreads using the infected computer's emailing networks.
Based on the settings of your F-Secure security product, it will either move the file to the quarantine where it cannot spread or cause harm, or remove it.
A False Positive is when a file is incorrectly detected as harmful, usually because its code or behavior resembles known harmful programs. A False Positive will usually be fixed in a subsequent database update without any action needed on your part. If you wish, you may also:
Check for the latest database updates
First check if your F-Secure security program is using the latest updates, then try scanning the file again.
Submit a sample
After checking, if you still believe the file is incorrectly detected, you can submit a sample of it for re-analysis.
Note: If the file was moved to quarantine, you need to collect the file from quarantine before you can submit it.
Exclude a file from further scanning
If you are certain that the file is safe and want to continue using it, you can exclude it from further scanning by the F-Secure security product.
Note: You need administrative rights to change the settings.
Email-Worm:W32/Lovelorn is a simple mass-mailer virus with a built-in SMTP engine, password stealing routines and several payloads. It was found on April 29th, 2003.
Lovelorn recursively searches through C: D: and E: drives. It tries to collect email addresses from files that have '.EML', *ITEM*.DBX' or '*BOX*.DBX' in their name. The emails sent by the virus are created using the following hardcoded elements:
The "From" address of these emails are always set to be one of the following addresses:
The emails are sent with an attachment that is either the worm in BASE64 encoded format ('*.Kiss.ok.exe') or an HTML file dropper file ('*.htm') (see the "Script Part" below).
Lovelorn monitors the running windows and tries to steal sensitive user information (eg. Yahoo login and password). If it manages to find some it sends it to a predefined email address.
The worm has several payloads. First of all it kills some processes that belong to certain antivirus applications. On certain dates Lovelorn drops a text file the root of the system drive (which is most often C:) as 'NQHv1.0.txt' and opens it with notepad.exe:
The dropped Setup.htm uses Visual Basic Script to create a binary file temp.exe in Windows Temp folder. Then it runs this binary file which is the worm code. The HTML body contains a string
which is visible for 5 seconds. After this, the script deletes itself (Setup.htm) so no traces of it are left on the infected system.