| What
is a virus?
The following
information on viruses is from www.whatis.com
A computer virus by definition is a program
code that attaches itself to other programs and can lead to destruction.
The intent of a virus is so that it automatically spreads itself to
other computer users. A computer virus can be transmitted in 3 forms
which include diskettes (CD, floppy, zip disk), as a download, or a
form or an e-mail attachment. Diskettes, downloads and e-mail attachments
that are infected cannot detect the dormant virus.
File infectors. Some
file infector viruses attach themselves to program files, usually selected
.COM or .EXE files. Some can infect any program for which execution
is requested, including .SYS, .OVL, .PRG, and .MNU files. When the program
is loaded, the virus is loaded as well. Other file infector viruses
arrive as wholly-contained programs or scripts sent as an attachment
to an e-mail note.
System or boot-record infectors.
These viruses infect executable code found in certain system areas on
a disk. They attach to the DOS boot sector on diskettes or the Master
Boot Record on hard disks. A typical scenario (familiar to the author)
is to receive a diskette from an innocent source that contains a boot
disk virus. When your operating system is running, files on the diskette
can be read without triggering the boot disk virus. However, if you
leave the diskette in the drive, and then turn the computer off or reload
the operating system, the computer will look first in your A drive,
find the diskette with its boot disk virus, load it, and make it temporarily
impossible to use your hard disk. (Allow several days for recovery.)
This is why you should make sure you have a bootable floppy.
Macro viruses. These
are among the most common viruses, and they tend to do the least damage.
Macro viruses infect your Microsoft Word application and typically insert
unwanted words or phrases.
The best protection against a virus is to know
the origin of each program or file you load into your computer or open
from your e-mail program. Since this is difficult, you can buy anti-virus
software that can screen e-mail attachments and also check all of your
files periodically and remove any viruses that are found. From time
to time, you may get an e-mail message warning of a new virus. Unless
the warning is from a source you recognize, chances are good that the
warning is a virus hoax.
The computer virus, of course, gets its
name from the biological virus. The word itself comes from a Latin word
meaning slimy liquid or poison.
To see a list of hoax viruses,
click here.
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