![]() ![]() Ironically, Sophos has also seen a number of banking Trojan horses - which are often written in Delphi - infected by Induc-A, indicating that the malware authors could also have been affected. This suggests the malware has been active for some time, and a number of software houses specialising in developing applications with Delphi could have been infected. ![]() In the past 24 hours SophosLabs has received more than 3,000 unique infected samples of programs infected by W32/Induc-A. The virus threatens software developers that use Delphi, but Sophos also warned many computer users running programs written in Delphi could be affected. The W32/Induc-A injects itself into the source code of any Delphi program it finds on an infected computer, and then compiles itself into a finished executable, Sophos warned.
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