Thursday, November 14, 2019
What is a virus - computer :: Computer Science
What is a virus - computer    What is a VIRUS    Virus (computer), self-duplicating computer program that interferes  with a computer's hardware or operating system (the basic software  that runs the computer). Viruses are designed to duplicate or  replicate themselves and to avoid detection. Like any other computer  program, a virus must be executed for it to function-that is, it must  be located in the computer's memory, and the computer must then follow  the virus's instructions. These instructions are called the payload of  the virus. The payload may disrupt or change data files, display an  irrelevant or unwanted message, or cause the operating system to  malfunction.    Computer viruses activate when the instructions-or executable  code-that run programs are opened. Once a virus is active, it may  replicate by various means and tries to infect the computer's files or  the operating system. For example, it may copy parts of itself to  floppy disks, to the computer's hard drive, into legitimate computer  programs, or it may attach itself to e-mail messages and spread across  computer networks by infecting other shared drives. Infection is much  more frequent in PCs than in professional mainframe systems because  programs on PCs are exchanged primarily by means of floppy disks,  e-mail, or over unregulated computer networks.    Viruses operate, replicate, and deliver their payloads only when they  are run. Therefore, if a computer is simply attached to an infected  computer network or downloading an infected program, it will not  necessarily become infected. Typically a computer user is not likely  to knowingly run potentially harmful computer code. However, viruses  often trick the computer's operating system or the computer user into  running the viral program.    Some viruses have the ability to attach themselves to otherwise  legitimate programs. This attachment may occur when the legitimate  program is created, opened, or modified. When that program is run, so  is the virus. Viruses can also reside on portions of the hard disk or  floppy disk that load and run the operating system when the computer  is started, and such viruses thereby are run automatically. In  computer networks, some viruses hide in the software that allows the  user to log on (gain access to)    Types of VIRUS    There are five categories of viruses: parasitic or file viruses,  bootstrap sector, multi-partite, macro, and script viruses.    Parasitic or file viruses infect executable files or programs in the  computer. These files are often identified by the extension .exe in  the name of the computer file. File viruses leave the contents of the  host program unchanged but attach to the host in such a way that the  virus code is run first. These viruses can be either direct-action or  resident. A direct-action virus selects one or more programs to infect    					    
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