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What is a virus?
A computer program that is loaded on your
computer without your knowledge, with the intent of doing some damage
to your system. The effect of computer viruses varies from doing so
little damage that you are unaware that your computer has been
infected, to wiping out the entire contents of your hard disk. There
are viruses which play music, display messages, change or delete files.
Computer viruses are manmade and most are intentionally designed to
replicate themselves. When the virus program runs it makes a copy of
itself and adds itself to another computer program. Each time the
infected program is run, the virus is also run and in this way spreads.
If your system is infected, you can easily spread the virus to others
through shared disks and email attachments.
Different types of viruses
File infectors: A block of code which
attaches itself to another program and is able to copy itself into
subsequent applications that you run.
Boot-sector viruses infect the area of the hard disk that are read and executed by the computer when it starts up.
Macro viruses: Macros are small programs
that can be used to carry out tedious repetitive tasks. For example,
you can write a Word macro to add your name, address and phone number
to documents. Macros run automatically when the file they are attached
to is opened. Macro viruses spread much more rapidly than other forms
of viruses as people frequently share data files. The most recent
viruses have been spread via email. The Love Bug was a macro virus that
caused considerable damage. The subject of the email was 'iloveyou' and
had an attached file called 'love-letter-for-you.txt.vbs.' The
attachment was a Visual Basic macro that erased files on your computer.
The virus then sent copies of itself to every address in the Microsoft
Outlook address book. As these replicated messages spread they created
jams in Internet traffic and the vast amount of mail caused Network
servers to crash. It spread round the world in two hours affecting tens
of millions of computers. SWBB urge you to keep your computer safe !
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