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- COMPUTER VIRUS HITS AGAIN
-
- A tiny mischievous computer program called a "virus" has popped
- up for what experts believe is the first time in retail software,
- according to a newspaper report published Tuesday.
-
- The appearance of the virus raises the fear that devilish
- programs created by practical jokers or vandals could be used to
- destroy computer software sold in stores, according to a story in
- the San Jose Mercury News.
-
- The virus found last week in FreeHand, a Macintosh program from
- Aldus Corp. in Seattle, consisted of a "message of peace"
- designed to appear on Macintosh screens on March 2, the
- anniversary of the Apple Macintosh SE and the Macintosh II,
- according to the report.
-
- "The time bomb already went off," said Donn Parker, a computer
- security specialist at SRI in Menlo Park. Although the brief
- pease message was harmless, its appearance alarmed experts who
- until now thought viruses were hidden only on software available
- on bulletin boards for little or no cost, or on programs shared
- by swappers, the newspaper reported.
-
- The "message of peace" virus originated at a Canadian publication
- called MacMag and was distributed by many bulletin boards in a
- program that purported to be a new listing of products made by
- Apple.
-
- The virus was inadvertently passed to Aldus by Marc Canter
- president of MacroMind Inc., of Chicago, maker of training disks
- for Aldus. Aldus would not disclose how many FreeHand copies are
- infected but said a disk duplicating machine copied the infected
- disk for three days. Half the infected disks have been
- distributed to retail outlets and the rest are in the company's
- warehouse.
-
- Canter was on a trip to Canada when he received an infected
- program for the Mr. Potato Head game, a computerized version of
- the popular toy. Unaware of the infection, Canter ran the
- program once and when he used the same computer to work on Aldus
- software, the disk headed for Aldus also became infected, he
- said.
-
- The computer virus was then inadvertently copied onto disks sold
- to customers and infected their computers, he said.
-
- It appears software designed by Lotus Development Corp.,Apple
- Computer Inc., of Cupertino; and Ashton-Tate may be infected by
- the virus, Canter told the Mercury News.
-
- From the:
- San Jose, Associated Press.
-
- Compliments of the
- Saginaw Valley Computer Association
- Furnished by Nancy Burdick