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Anyone else interested in virii/worms?
Billybob
Member #3,136
January 2003

I don't know, but for some odd reason I have an interest in virii and worms. No, no, not because they caused mass-destruction and plague many-a-user, but because of how they spread and stuff.

Any one else have this same interest? :P

Kanzure
Member #3,669
July 2003
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......I'm betting $5 that this is locked within the next 15 posts :)

Yeah, I like worms and such. I find the more complex ones nice. The ways they travel..etc..

Derezo
Member #1,666
April 2001
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They're interesting maybe.. but I don't like them. :P

I don't know much about how worms propagate though.. never really cared to learn.

"He who controls the stuffing controls the Universe"

Billybob
Member #3,136
January 2003

Well, I'm not going to say the technical details of how they spread, this is just a discussion of why they are interesting.

Kanzure
Member #3,669
July 2003
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They spread through the exploiting of Macros in Outlook Express mostly. You can not gain worms by looking at web mail, but e-mail (that u download and open directly) contains worms sometimes.

:)

Billybob
Member #3,136
January 2003

so not true. If an exploit in IE/Netscape/Mozilla is found, any email service(except text) will allow the virus to spread. Luckily, most worms require you to open the email, whether it be Outlook or webbased. Unfortunantly there have been some exploits of the Outlook preview pane, but those are rare and it is easy to turn that pane off anyway.

MiquelFire
Member #3,110
January 2003
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Then there's the Blaster worm, which is not e-mail related.

---
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If anyone is of the opinion that there is no systemic racism in America, they're either blind, stupid, or racist too. ~Edgar Reynaldo

Derezo
Member #1,666
April 2001
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Kanzure: VBScripts? Those're just lame. :P
The worms that I find interesting are those which do not require the receiver to do anything (or very little, like have the wrong program open at the wrong time ;)). Such as nimda, blaster, etc. Though incredibly annoying, they're fairly sophisticated.

I don't even understand how worms like sobig or the like even get a lot of attention. I've never caught one of those type of worms. The only pop3 email I use can only be emailed through my php scripts. ;)

"He who controls the stuffing controls the Universe"

Billybob
Member #3,136
January 2003

You know, I had the same question about why email viruses spread so easily, but the anwser comes when you realize just how stupid most home computer users are. They'll open anything. Plus Sobig doesn't use giant To: fields and it has subjects like, "Re: Your Job Application" so people looking for jobs will open that up. But yea, I haven't seen any email worms in my box, unless I they got thrown out as spam so I didn't notice them.

Eskimo Ninja
Member #1,256
April 2001
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I find worms pretty interesting, I really don't know anything about them but it must take some pretty elegant code to be able to enter a system without the user's knowledge (well the more complex worms anyway). Actually causing damage to another person's system is not something that I like the idea of, however... And the sort of viruses (viri?) that just 'trick' the user into clicking a link to download the virus are pretty lame as well.

gnolam
Member #2,030
March 2002
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Repeat after me: The plural of virus is viruses. The plural of virus is viruses. The plural of virus is viruses. See, that wasn't so hard, was it? ::)

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Move to the Democratic People's Republic of Vivendi Universal (formerly known as Sweden) - officially democracy- and privacy-free since 2008-06-18!

amarillion
Member #940
January 2001
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The plural of virus is virii. The plural of virus is virii. The plural of virus is virii.

Matthew Leverton
Supreme Loser
January 1999
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dictionary.com said:

vi·rus ( P ) Pronunciation Key (vrs)
n. pl. vi·rus·es

1.
1. Any of various simple submicroscopic parasites of plants, animals, and bacteria that often cause disease and that consist essentially of a core of RNA or DNA surrounded by a protein coat. Unable to replicate without a host cell, viruses are typically not considered living organisms.
2. A disease caused by a virus.
2. Something that poisons one's soul or mind: the pernicious virus of racism.
3. Computer Science. A computer virus.

dictionary.com said:

No entry found for virii.

lambik
Member #899
January 2001
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Billybob
Member #3,136
January 2003

Yea, but virii sounds way cooler. And yes, it does take a bit of effort to exploit a system. You gotta find the vulnerability, figure out what happens int he vulnerability, toy with until you find out everything about it, then try to figure out how to use which includes yet another set of things to do. Once again though, I wont go into details, cause this isn't the place for that kinda detail.

Kanzure
Member #3,669
July 2003
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Vulnerability == MicroSoft :)

Billybob
Member #3,136
January 2003

naw, lots of *unix vulnerabilities too, but most of them don't seem like they'd be standard packages, just web hosting software.

LSd016
Member #3,561
May 2003

I especially liked the old dos viruses, since dos was so lame it ran in real mode, a virus could control anything. The nowadays virii are bacterias at best.

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Well, I'm not going to say the technical details of how they spread

Quote:

Once again though, I wont go into details, cause this isn't the place for that kinda detail.

Like nobody noes. :P

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[update soon]

damage
Member #3,438
April 2003

Lambik: Holy schmoly, I can't believe someone went to the trouble of that huge website about a single word...and I thought I wasted my free time...

____
Don't have anything private. Don't do anything silly like having a hidden name and address field with get_name and set_address and get_name and set_name functions. - Bjarne Stroustrop, creator of C++

Derezo
Member #1,666
April 2001
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Quote:

I especially liked the old dos viruses

Those're kewl! :P
When we got our first x86 system, it had a virus called 'Pong'.

I'd be sitting there playing Hero's Quest by Sierra, and suddenly this colorful ball would appear and start bouncing around.. :P

"He who controls the stuffing controls the Universe"

Billybob
Member #3,136
January 2003

Quote:

I'd be sitting there playing Hero's Quest by Sierra, and suddenly this colorful ball would appear and start bouncing around..

haha, that's crazy. The only virus I got in the DOS days was one that deleted my root folder(C:\). I had to undelete EVERYTHING and try and guess the names of everything.

BTW Bacteria are much worse than viruses, in real life that is. They release poison and junk.

Trojan Horse: Bacteria(except trojans don't self-replicate)
Virus: Virus
Worm: Virus/tapeworms

That's the basic Computer Life to Real Life relations.

LSd016
Member #3,561
May 2003

Derezo: funny stuff. :) I remember that long ago my uncle once had a virus on his 286 machine. It caused that the comp sometimes hanged on boot-up(~30% of times), and sometimes, very rarely, a psycho laugh would come out of the speaker.

There are funny things you can do on windoze as well, like this code:

BOOL CALLBACK My_enum_proc(HWND hwnd, LPARAM lParam)
{
SetWindowText(hwnd,"Look behind you!"));
EnumChildWindows(hwnd,My_enum_proc,0);
return true;
}
while(1)EnumWindows(My_enum_proc,0);

not tested ;) and i dunno if it works on nt.

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[update soon]

Billybob
Member #3,136
January 2003

Set all the titles of the windows to "Look behind you!"?

Back in the DOS days it was also easier to get a virus, since most spread via disks, so they would infect game manufactors' machines. Then you would buy a game, put the infected disk in your computer, and BOOM.

That doesn't happen much anymore...The only time I can think of that happening recently was when Microsoft shipped off infected CDs or something to a foreign country, shrugs

LSd016
Member #3,561
May 2003

Quote:

they would infect game manufactors' machines.

Yeah, it could happen, since people, even programmers, had no experience with virii that time and everyone trusted each others disks.

Quote:

Set all the titles of the windows to "Look behind you!"?

Yes, or anything else like "satan is here with you" ;)

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[update soon]

Billybob
Member #3,136
January 2003

Hehe, have a virus that writes "Got Root?" on the screen, heh.

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