Exactly who names a
virus?
People have often wondered who gives
viruses their names. The fact are that once a virus is
identified; anti virus companies compete with each other to be
the first to break the news about the newest virus and it's
potential.
They want to make sure that their customers heard it first
from them but they can not announce something that does not
have a name yet.
Many companies will throw in their input as to what they
think the name should be. Sometimes the virus will end up with
multiple names and that can be very confusing. The problem
comes in because the whole thing is so competitive.
Apparently, no one is in charge unless someone is directly
put in charge from that particular company. The most important
thing is to come up with a fix for the problem at hand and not
to worry about giving it a name. Viruses have become so
prominent that many are brought to the attention of the public
but others never are so to sit around wasting time deciding on
a name is ridiculous to say the least.
There are actually rules about virus naming, some things are
allowed while others are not. Some have been named after pop
(Code Red) and some were named by running down a list of trees.
It is not allowed for a virus to be named after a person or a
company and it is also avoided to name the virus part of what
the virus writer intended in the malicious code. The most
important thing is that each virus only has one name or it
really can be confusing to everyone.
Most people who get the fancy job of naming a virus are
probably having lunch with the same people who name the
hurricanes. Supposedly, viruses are attempted to be named from
something unique about the viruses coding or behavior. For
example, when the virus mydoom was named there was coding in
the program that said my domain, which was then shortened to
mydoom and then because the virus was a big one, they added an
extra o and named it mydoom.
Referencing the very same virus, while one company named it
mydoom, which was the name that virus was come to be known for,
Symantec came forward and introduced that very same virus and
called it Novarg. Trend Micro came forth and called the same
virus Mimail.r. So, many wonder how it was that Mydoom ended up
the winner and the answer to that is the company that finds and
posts information about a virus first, gets to name it. Maybe
that is enough incentive to keep them on top of their game
while looking for those bogus viruses.
Most people do not give a darn what the virus is called as
long as it is discovered and accompanied with a way to get rid
of it. Some antivirus companies also claim that even if one
company is the first to find and post virus information, in the
heat of the moment, as in the case of Mydoom, that company may
not always be the winner.
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