Virus 09
Virus 09
VIRUS !
Worms
virus that copies and multiplies itself by using computer networks and security flaws
E-mail Viruses
use e-mail messages to spread which allow it to automatically forward itself to thousands of people
Types of Viruses
Boot Sector Virus
Infects the boot or MBR of diskettes and hard drives through the sharing of infected disks and pirated software applications Once your hard drive is infected all diskettes that you use in your computer will be infected
Program Virus
Becomes active when the program file (usually with extensions .BIN, .COM, .EXE, .OVL, .DRV) carrying the virus is opened It then makes copies of itself and will infect other programs on the computer
Multipartite Virus
Hybrid of a Boot Sector and Program viruses It infects program files and when the infected program is active it will affect the boot record
Types of Viruses
Stealth Virus
Disguises itself to prevent from being detected by antivirus software It alters its file size or conceals itself in memory
Polymorphic Virus
Act like a chameleon, changing its virus signature (binary pattern) every time it multiples and infects a new file
Macro Virus
Programmed as a macro embedded in a document, usually found in Microsoft Word and Excel Once it gets in to your computer, every document you produce will become infected Relatively new type of virus and may slip by your antivirus software if you don't have the most recent version installed
themselves occupied system resources, slowing down the productivity. -"The Creeper" capable of entering a network by itself and transferring a copy of itself to the system. Early 80,s-Increasing number of programs written by individuals not by software companies. Programs caused miner viruses called "Trojan horses". 1986'Brain virus' - by Amjad and Basit Farooq Alvi. spread through floppy disks, infected boot records and not computer hard drives Lahore, Pakistani Brain, Brain-A and UIUC virus -took over free space on the floppy disk and hid from detection disguised itself by displaying the uninfected boot sector on the disk. 1987-Lehigh virus - the first memory resident file infector that attacked executable files and took control when a file was opened
1988: Robert Morris made a worm that invaded ARPANET computers - disabled 6,000 computers on the network by overflowing their memory banks
with copies of itself 1991: Norton Anti-Virus software 1999: "Melissa" virus -infected thousands of computers very fast by sending copies of itself to 50 names in the address book on Outlook e-mail - Led to an estimated $80 million in damage and record sales of anti-virus products. 2000: "I Love You" virus -was sent by email and infected 10 % of computers in only one day -created by a young Filipino computer student who did not get punished because then the Philippines had no laws against hacking which led to the European Union's global Cybercrime Treaty. 2001: "Nimda" virus (days after 9/11) -had 5 ways of infecting systems
2004
MyDoom spreads through emails and file-sharing software faster than any previous virus or worm. Allows hackers to access the hard drive of the infected computer. An estimated one million computers running Windows are affected by the fast-spreading Sasser computer worm. The worm does not cause irreparable harm to computers or data,
2006 2008
but it does slow computers and cause some to quit or reboot without explanation.
Torpig is a Trojan horse which affects Windows, turning off antivirus applications. It allows others to access the computer, modifies data, steals
confidential information and installs malware on the victim's computer.
2009
Conficker infects anywhere from 9 to 15 million Microsoft server systems.
French air force, Royal Navy warships and submarines, Sheffield Hospital network, UK Ministry of Defence, German Bundeswehr and Norwegian Police were all affected.
Total Number of Viruses by year January 1985 1 January 1985 1 January 1987 3 January 1989 6 January 1990 142 January 1991 357 January 1992 1,161 January 1993 2,482 January 1994 3,687 January 1995 5,626 January 1996 7,764 January 1997 11,037 January 1998 16,726 January 1999 40,850 January 2000 44,000 January 2001 48,000 January 2002 55,000 January 2003 62,000
Melissa
Another virus that fired up the media was Melissa, a Word macro
virus. When people received the host Word document via email and opened it, the virus sent a copy of itself to the first 50 people in the victim's address book. Named after a topless dancer in Florida, the Melissa virus crashed the email servers of corporations and governments in different spots around the world. The Computer Emergency Response Team, set up after Robert Morris mucked up the Internet with his worm in 1988, estimated that the virus hit 100,000 computers in its first weekend. David L. Smith posted the infected file to an alt.sex usenet group using a stolen AOL account. Initially he entered a plea of innocence, but after being confronted with a maximum sentence of 40 years in prison, he eventually pled guilty and received a muchreduced sentence.
The Love Bug spread far faster than Melissa. Unlike Melissa,
it would mail itself to everyone in your Outlook address book -- most of whom would probably be delighted to read about how you love them -- not just the first fifty. Moreover, it would gobble up certain media files stored on your hard drive.
Prevention
Upload and use antivirus
software Be aware of the e-mails and attachments you open Check for updates on antivirus software regularly Make sure antivirus software is installed correctly
Sources
http://www.tech-faq.com/history-of-computer-viruses.shtml http://spamlaws.com/history.html
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Computer_virus#History
http://www.infoplease.com/ipa/A0872842.html
References
http://www.spamlaws.com/protect.html http://www.spamlaws.com/virus-types.html http://www.spamlaws.com/virus-comtypes.html http://www.spamlaws.com/federal/index.shtml http://www.spamlaws.com/virus-types.html Wikipedia www.suggestafix.com www.microsoft.com