Historic Virus
Patterns
When people hear about a new computer
virus it definitely grabs their attention. No one likes to be
left vulnerable and the thought of it makes most peoples skin
crawl.
The fact is that a properly designed and executed virus
attack could almost shut down the world as we know it.
When looking back on some of the past viruses that stand out
as the most devastating, you should remember that future
attacks promise to be much worse.
Mydoom virus hit the computer world in 94 and infected
almost a half a million computers in just one day. It appeared
as a normal error message but contained malicious programming.
It was a huge outbreak and was recognized worldwide.
The main target for this worm was Windows and the message
simply read, "This message contains Unicode characters and has
been sent as a binary attachment." Because it sounded
intelligent and was not promising nude photos or lucrative
money guarantees, it seemed simple enough and most people
opened it. By then it was too late, the virus had
flourished.
In 99 the Melissa virus landed with a fury. It affected
machines with Microsoft Word 97 and Word 2000. It came in the
form of an email attachment with a subject line that read,
"Important message from (users full name) which again gave the
email some validity and the body was in full text and simply
said, "Here is the document that you asked for...do not show it
to anyone else." As soon as the virus was executed it
immediately lowered the macro settings which left the machine
vulnerable because it allowed all macros to run when any future
documents were opened with no knowledge to the user. It then
checked the register keys for the correct value and if it was
not present then it would send the same email to the first
fifty people in the users address book. Finally, once the value
is added to the registry key then the macro infects the
normal.dot template file resulting in any future Word documents
being infected.
The final encore was when the minute of the hour matched the
day of the month, the macro would insert a final message into a
document that stated, "Twenty-two points, triple word score,
plus fifty points for using all my letters. Games over. I'm
outta here." The Melissa virus was so powerful that it caused
Microsoft as well as many other huge companies to completely
shut down their email systems until the virus was
contained.
The ILoveYou virus arrived in 2000 and it too, was an email
virus. The subject line read, "I love you." The message read,
"Kindly check the attached LOVELETTER coming from me." You
guessed it, as soon as the attachment is opened the worm runs
and attaches copies of it and writes an .HTM file. It also
manipulates the registry keys and changes any jpg or jpeg files
with copies of it instead. Basically, it overwrites every
single file. These are a few of the worst viruses that have
been dealt with in the past years but most fear that the worst
is yet to come.
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