Computer Viruses of All Time
Computer viruses can be a nightmare. Some can wipe out the
information on a hard drive, tie up traffic on a computer network for
hours, turn an innocent machine into a zombie
and replicate and send themselves to other computers. If you've never
had a machine fall victim to a computer virus, you may wonder what the
fuss is about. But the concern is understandable -- according to
Consumer Reports, computer viruses helped contribute to $8.5 billion in
consumer losses in 2008 [source: MarketWatch]. Computer viruses are just one kind of online threat, but they're arguably the best known of the bunch.
While some pranksters created virus-like programs for large computer systems, it was really the introduction of the personal computer that brought computer viruses to the public's attention. A doctoral student named Fred Cohen was the first to describe self-replicating programs designed to modify computers as viruses. The name has stuck ever since.
In the good old days (i.e., the early 1980s), viruses depended on humans to do the hard work of spreading the virus to other computers. A hacker would save the virus to disks and then distribute the disks to other people. It wasn't until modems became common that virus transmission became a real problem. Today when we think of a computer virus, we usually imagine something that transmits itself via the Internet. It might infect computers through e-mail messages or corrupted Web links. Programs like these can spread much faster than the earliest computer viruses.
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