My Doom Virus
The MyDoom (or Novarg) virus is another worm that can create a backdoor in the victim computer's operating system.
The original MyDoom virus -- there have been several variants -- had
two triggers. One trigger caused the virus to begin a denial of service
(DoS) attack starting Feb. 1, 2004. The second trigger commanded the
virus to stop distributing itself on Feb. 12, 2004. Even after the virus
stopped spreading, the backdoors created during the initial infections
remained active [source: Symantec].
Later that year, a second outbreak of the MyDoom virus gave several search engine
companies grief. Like other viruses, MyDoom searched victim computers
for e-mail addresses as part of its replication process. But it would
also send a search request to a search engine and use e-mail addresses
found in the search results. Eventually, search engines like Google
began to receive millions of search requests from corrupted computers.
These attacks slowed down search engine services and even caused some to
crash [source: Sullivan].
MyDoom spread through e-mail and peer-to-peer networks. According to the security firm MessageLabs, one in every 12 e-mail messages carried the virus at one time [source: BBC]. Like the Klez virus, MyDoom could spoof e-mails so that it became very difficult to track the source of the infection.
Oddball Viruses
Not
all viruses cause severe damage to computers or destroy networks. Some
just cause computers to act in odd ways. An early virus called Ping-Pong
created a bouncing ball graphic, but didn't seriously damage the
infected computer. There are several joke programs that might make a
computer owner think his or her computer is infected, but they're really
harmless applications that don't self-replicate. When in doubt, it's
best to let an antivirus program remove the application.
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