Winners of 10,000 MP3 players given away in a Japanese fast-food promotion got more than they bargained for, as their prizes
contained a worm. If they connect the music players to their computers to fill them with songs then the worm, WORM_QQPASS.ADH,
can infect the computers and steal personal data.
McDonald's Holdings Co. (Japan) Ltd., the Japanese subsidiary of the U.S. fast-food chain, warned prize winners about the
infected players Friday. It offered a Web link to software provided by Trend Micro Inc. that can remove the worm from infected
computers, and invited winners to return their MP3 players for a free replacement.
The worm spreads from the MP3 player to other removable drives on computers running Microsoft Corp.'s Windows operating system,
and attempts to disable some anti-virus applications. If it finds the QQ Instant Messenger application running, it attempts
to steal account login information and other chat details, and transmit them by e-mail. The QQ Instant Messenger service is
popular in China and South Africa.
McDonald's ran the MP3 player promotion from Aug. 4 to Aug. 31, and sent the prizes to 10,000 winners in late September, according
to its Japanese Web site.
Trend Micro first received samples of the worm on Sept. 29, according to its Web site. It rates the risk of damage to a computer
infected by the worm as high, but the overall risk as low, given the small number of infections reported so far.
(Martyn Williams, in Tokyo, contributed to this report.)