Explanation of viruses and worms |
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EXPERT RESPONSE FROM: Robert Vibert

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QUESTION POSED ON: 25 October 2001
Can you further explain the difference between a virus and worm? I found the previous explanation to be brief.
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A Trojan horse program is named after the infamous Greek Trojan horse
of history. A Trojan or Trojan horse is an imposter file, presented to you
as doing something beneficial or benign to your computer. When run, the
Trojan might or might not do what it claims, but it will also or instead will do something else, such as format your hard-drive. A Trojan does not
replicate.
A computer virus is a small program written to do something to a
computer without the consent (and often the knowledge) of the computer
user. For a program to be considered to be a virus, it must somehow
cause itself to be replicated once it has been executed by the user.
So, for e-mail attachments, a virus file would need to be double-clicked to
activate and then replicate on that computer.
A worm is a program which actively replicates itself to other computers.
A worm arriving via e-mail would start spreading itself to other computers
as soon as it was activated. This could be by sending itself out via e-mail
or by exploiting open file shares on a network.
These days, many examples of malware combine the techniques into
hybrids, and debating the differences becomes an exercise for purists.
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