Only days after Swiss programmer Ruben Unteregger released the source code for a Trojan he wrote three years ago to hack Skype phone calls, the inevitable has happened -- someone has released it as a compiled piece of 'faux' malware.

Unteregger posted the code on his website under a GLPv3 license, presumably in the hope that its publication would make it impossible to use against real users, having had second thoughts about the morality of his creation. He wrote the program in 2006 for a private company, ERA IT Solutions, which alledgedly sold it on to an agency of the Swiss government to use in remote surveillance activities.

Now Symantec and Trend Micro have reported that a Windows Trojan with remarkably similar characteristics has turned up in their detection systems, Trojan.PeskySpy in Symantec nomenclature, and Troj_Spayke.C to Trend. Neither company states openly that the Trojan detected is related to Unteregger's open source creation, but there are enough clues to forge a strong connection.

More: http://pcworld.com/article/171117/