computer-virus


Robert Tappan Morris And The Internet Worm

Robert Tappan Morris and the Internet Worm

Robert Tappan Morris claims he only wanted to measure the size of the Internet, but he didn't count on the speed and power of his program.

He wrote a virus program that would spread to other computers. He made the program smart; before it infected a new system, it would actually check and see if there was already an active copy running there.

Unfortunately, at the same time, he made it stupid. It would be really easy to prevent the spread of the program just by telling all of the computers on the network to always answer "yes" when the virus checked. So, Morris programmed it to install another copy of itself fourteen percent of the time.

The main part of the program was designed to hack into known Unix weaknesses, like the Finger bug and Sendmail.

On November 2, 1998, Morris released his creation from a computer at MIT (to hide the fact that the virus was created at Cornell). Within hours, the Internet had slowed to a crawl.

Morris hadn't counted on the speed of the program. Fourteen percent is a small number in human terms, but a huge number in microseconds. Infected computers were spending every available bit of power into hunting for more computers to infect. Some estimates say that the worm hit over six thousand computers, and the government claims damages of at least ten million dollars.

The Internet Worm was quite probably the first computer virus to spread across the Internet, and the first one noticed by the mainstream. It forced many computer experts to rethink computer security and the nature of the Internet, and we're still learning the same lessons today.

Robert Tappan Morris was sentenced to probation and a fine, and today he is an associate professor at MIT, the college he released the Internet Worm from.

 

 
Search This Site

Computer Virus Info

 

 

 

Computer Virus Info


File Sharing Viruses

... with caution. If you plan to engage in this type of activity then the very least you can do for yourself is buy a very good and up to date virus scanner. Downloading from someone that you do no know on a p2p site is as dangerous as opening up an attachment from someone that you do not know. Make sure ... 

Read Full Article  


History Of Computer Viruses 1989 1999

... virus. Ghostball was the first Multipartite virus, because it could follow several attack patterns. In 1990, a programmer named Mark Washburn demonstrated a Polymorphic virus.called 1260. This virus could actually change the structure of it s own code meaning, every time it infected a new system, it looked ... 

Read Full Article  


Where Do Viruses Come From

... Basically it is done as a way to get something for nothing and it is a way to use the Internet for free. Another way that virus writers operate is to create bot networks or zombie networks that infect computers with identical malicious code. These are generally used as spamming platforms. The hackers ... 

Read Full Article  


History Of Computer Viruses Since 2001

... causing all infected systems to flood the site on August 15th. The programmer was convicted because investigators actually found his name in the virus code. Only a few days later, SoBig attacked. This was another emailing virus. After infection, it searched the files on the hard drive for email addresses ... 

Read Full Article  


Why Boot Viruses Are So Common

... viruses are marching strong, now accounting for almost all of the computer infections. This has left quite a puzzle to solve and although many would like to shake the hand of all of the antivirus programs and congratulate them, the truth is simply that they are not responsible. There is no correlation ... 

Read Full Article