Li Jun, author of the "panda" virus that was used to infect
computers across the country, was yesterday sentenced to four years
in prison by the People's Court in Xiantao, Hubei Province.
Three accomplices of the 25-year-old man, all aged in their
twenties, were given sentences of between one and two-and-a-half
years.
The four were found guilty of writing the virus and transmitting
it via the Internet, causing damage to millions of computers
between last November and March of this year.
The case is also the first in the country involving the use of a
virus for financial gain.
Li admitted to writing the virus, officially named xiongmao
shaoxiang (panda burning joss stick), on October 16, 2006.
It is so named because it converts the icons of infected
programs into a picture of a panda holding three joss sticks.
According to a spokesperson for Rising, a Chinese anti-virus
company, panda can still be found online in about 100
mutations.
The company listed it as the worst virus of last year.
Infections were found in both the Chinese and English versions
of Windows, where it could be used to force PCs to automatically
restart and also steal user information from online gamers and
chatters.
The Rising spokesperson estimated the four authors also made
about 200,000 yuan (US$27,000) from the sale of the program's
script.
After being detained in February, Li wrote an anti-virus program
to combat panda. Previous attempts to kill the virus were largely
the work of online volunteer groups.
A recent report by Rising said 133,717 new viruses were reported
on the mainland in the first half of this year.
As of the end of June, China was estimated to have 162 million
Internet users.
(China Daily September 25, 2007)