Nippo
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« on: April 15, 2023 @991.02 » |
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I was tasked to write a research paper for my cybersecurity class, so I decided to make my topic about legacy computer viruses.
I was wondering if you guys had any recommendations for cool and/or funny legacy viruses that I could write about. Preferably looking for viruses around Windows 3.1 - XP but send whatever you'd like because I would be interested regardless. Current examples I have are worms like LoveLetter, and Microsoft Word script viruses are also pretty goofy.
I think it is common sense to not share any virus files. Just the names of them or to useful wiki articles that go into detail! I think it is important to document older viruses and how they had an impact on the industry during that time period, as well as how it has led to modern computer security.
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Memory
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« Reply #4 on: April 15, 2023 @688.62 » |
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We could also talk about those surprise viruses we received when downloading junk from p2p programs such as LimeWire and Ares? Those were very annoying times for people who didn't even know what they were downloading, including me in the past . I remember that one """"technique"""" I used to know if some programs were viruses was to just check the metadata and the size of the file.
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« Last Edit: April 15, 2023 @690.49 by GeckoF »
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Sinclair-Speccy
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« Reply #8 on: April 16, 2023 @219.98 » |
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You could honestly write 50 essays on this topic and still have more to talk about. Here's some ones I find interesting:
- Creeper, the first computer worm.
- Morris Worm, the first virus that led to a felony conviction in the US.
- Staog, the first virus for linux systems.
Creeper is a pog virus, but would you really call it a worm if it was an experiment?
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AlphonseSinclair
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brisray
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« Reply #9 on: April 16, 2023 @842.42 » |
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This predates even Windows 3.1, the first computer virus I ever got was Ambulance - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ambulance_(computer_virus)
Some of the computer magazine cover disks were infected, especially around 1998 when the Marburg Virus was distributed by 3 different magazines - http://virus.wikidot.com/marburg
Not really virues but it gave some people a scare when the cover disks started giving away software utilities that could do weird things to unsuspecting users' computers. One I think was called "Wash" and that popped up a message saying "cleaning your hard drive..." then played an audio file that sounded like a washing machine and sounded like your hard drive was spinning about a million rpm.
Then there was Drop or Cascade that dropped the letters on your screen to a heap at the bottom - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z7g-v3d7-Gk
Another was Taxi, which sounded like some unintelligible walkie-talkie communication.
Up until Stuxnet I only heard of one computer virus that could actually damage computer hardware. Using Assembly (ASM) you can control where the heads are on a hard drive. It is theoretically possible to keep crashing the arm into the end stops until they either bend, get stuck, or simply stop working.
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