<p>Players of an old Call of Duty game are being infected by hackers with a worm that automatically spreads in online lobbies.</p>.<p>On June 26, a player of <em>Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 2 </em>warned other players on a Steam forum that hackers "attack using hacked lobbies," and advised using an antivirus, reported the <em>TechCrunch</em>.</p>.<p>It looks like the malware mentioned in the thread is on the malware online repository VirusTotal.</p>.<p>Another player claimed to have analysed the malware and said in the same forum thread that the malware seems to be a worm, based on a number of text strings inside the malware.</p>.<p>The presence of those strings in the malware, which suggests a worm, was confirmed by a game industry insider on condition of anonymity.</p>.<p>Neil Wood, spokesperson of Activision, which released the game in 2009, referenced a tweet posted by the company from the 'Call of Duty Updates' account on Thursday that indirectly mentioned the malware.</p>.<p>“Multiplayer for <em>Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 2</em> (2009) on Steam was brought offline while we investigate reports of an issue,” the tweet read.</p>.<p>It is still unclear why the hackers are spreading this malware.</p>.<p>The malware is a worm since it seems to automatically spread from one infected gamer to another through online lobbies.</p>.<p>"This means the hackers must have found and are exploiting one or multiple bugs in the game to execute malicious code on the other players’ computers," the report said.</p>
<p>Players of an old Call of Duty game are being infected by hackers with a worm that automatically spreads in online lobbies.</p>.<p>On June 26, a player of <em>Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 2 </em>warned other players on a Steam forum that hackers "attack using hacked lobbies," and advised using an antivirus, reported the <em>TechCrunch</em>.</p>.<p>It looks like the malware mentioned in the thread is on the malware online repository VirusTotal.</p>.<p>Another player claimed to have analysed the malware and said in the same forum thread that the malware seems to be a worm, based on a number of text strings inside the malware.</p>.<p>The presence of those strings in the malware, which suggests a worm, was confirmed by a game industry insider on condition of anonymity.</p>.<p>Neil Wood, spokesperson of Activision, which released the game in 2009, referenced a tweet posted by the company from the 'Call of Duty Updates' account on Thursday that indirectly mentioned the malware.</p>.<p>“Multiplayer for <em>Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 2</em> (2009) on Steam was brought offline while we investigate reports of an issue,” the tweet read.</p>.<p>It is still unclear why the hackers are spreading this malware.</p>.<p>The malware is a worm since it seems to automatically spread from one infected gamer to another through online lobbies.</p>.<p>"This means the hackers must have found and are exploiting one or multiple bugs in the game to execute malicious code on the other players’ computers," the report said.</p>