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Internet Security Systems

Internet Security Systems (ISSX)

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PeriodChangeChange %OpenHighLowAvg. Daily VolVWAP
10000000CS
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260000000CS
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1560000000CS
2600000000CS

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ISSX Discussion

View Posts
Crazy Money Crazy Money 14 years ago
everything worked out A.O.K.
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Rock Trueblood Rock Trueblood 21 years ago
Virus That Infects E-Mails Expanding Its Reach








Reuters
Thursday, August 21, 2003; 8:24 PM



By Bernhard Warner and Elinor Mills Abreu

LONDON/SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - A new computer virus, feared to be the most potent ever, expanded its reach around the globe on Thursday, sending e-mail networks crashing and frazzling technicians already overstretched by a plague of computer bugs.

In the United States, Internet and e-mail service providers were blocking the worm in record numbers, while others were getting through to an untold number of unprotected computer users. Those people were complaining of hundreds, and even thousands, of e-mails with the worm in their inboxes.

Internet service America Online said it blocked 23.2 million copies of the worm from reaching its customers and e-mail security provider Postini said it quarantined 3.5 million copies.

MessageLabs, a British-based Internet security firm, said one in 17 e-mails sent around the world since Monday had been affected by SoBig.F.

The SoBig.F virus, which first appeared on computing systems Monday, spreads when unsuspecting computer users open file attachments in e-mails that contain such familiar headings as "Thank you," "Re: Details" or "Re: approved."

Once the file is opened, SoBig.F resends itself to scores of e-mail addresses from the infected computer and signs the e-mail using a random name and address from the infected computer's address book, which makes tracing it back to the source extremely difficult.

SoBig.F also leaves a back-door program on the computer, which experts said may be used later to turn infected PCs into spam relay machines, as previous versions of Sob did.

The worm was bogging down e-mail systems, bouncing automatic replies back to people listed as the sender but who likely were not.

SOBIG, SO BAD

MessageLabs' chief information analyst, Paul Wood, said it was feared that SoBig.F could increase global e-mail traffic by as much as 60 percent, slowing the Internet to a crawl.

"It's unprecedented in our history. We stopped over one million (infections) in the first day," he said. "It's a pretty frightening statistic. And the next incarnation could be even worse."

Technicians have been scrambling for the past week to fend off the most concentrated onslaught ever seen from worms. A "worm" is a type of computer virus that can send itself over a network without being attached to another, "host," program.

The outbreak began 10 days ago with the so-called "Blaster," or "LovSan," worm which, by some estimates, infected more than 500,000 computers running Microsoft Corp.'s Windows software, the world's dominant operating system.

This week, the "Welchia" worm, also dubbed "Nachi," surfaced. It was designed to patch the hole in Windows that Blaster, and Welchia, use to infect a computer.

But Welchia clogs computer networks, slowing Internet connections and even knocking some systems offline. Its victims include the European engineering firm ABB , Air Canada and the U.S. Navy and Marine Corps.

On Thursday, experts reiterated their advice to computer users to shore up their machines with anti-virus software and to delete suspicious-looking e-mails, hoping that preventive medicine will stop this wave before the next round.



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Rock Trueblood Rock Trueblood 21 years ago
Okay. Here we are, Aug. 21, and the media is covering the Blaster worm/virus. WSJ today carries a story how this virus slowed down CSX Railroad, Jupiter Media, Air Canada and other businesses yesterday. Internet Security is a must.

Looking over ISSX, we see where the company had to lower expectations for the third quarter after a shortfall in earnings for the second quarter.

However, no one at ISSX could have possibly fortold their luck in having a worm/virus loosed upon the internet in the 3rd quarter which is knocking businesses for a loop.

I picked up shares of ISSX yesterday at 12.54 per share. I did this on the daily charts which had a 3 soldier rising chart pattern.

ISSX finished the day at 12.62. This candlestick took out the 12.50 resistance set on the gap down day, July 18.

Yesterday was the fifth straight up day for ISSX with increasing volume on each susequent day.

The weekly chart shows a strong white candlestick growing towards the down trendline pulled from May 2002. The previous week's white candlestick formed a bullish harami.

This downtrendline was kissed five times since May 2002, and then ISSX would continue to fall. I feel the sixth time will be a charm, and I look for ISSX to bust through that weekly downtrendline which is meeting a slowly growing uptrendline from the yearly low set in May.

The monthly trendline is one to take your time smiling over. The all time high, set back in February 2000 is $141.00.

Yeah, I know, the internet bubble burst right about then too. But if you take time to draw the down channel from that all time high, guess what? The current monthly candlestick is a hair away from finally bursting through this 3 1/2 year old down trendline.

All I can say is watch or trade along with me. I'm in. And internet security is on everyone's lips and on the front page of every newspaper in America at the moment.

I recommend you give this one a look.
Low for the last 52 weeks was 9.85, the high 26.77.
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