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- 40Hex Issue 4 December 1991
-
- "No feelings of what I left behind, no guilt for the victims of my
- crime. No compassion, just a burning deep inside. No pain... I'm here
- just to die... " - Sub Zero
-
-
- This artical is from the 11/26/91 morning final of the San Jose Mercury News
-
- **text written like this is my comments**
-
- SURVEY DEFLATES COMPUTER-VIRUS DANGERS
-
- But safeguards are few as cases proliferate.
-
- Computer viruses, those nasty bits of distructive programming unleashed
- by deviant hackers, are multiplying at a startling rate - but haven't
- proved nearly as troublesome as once feared and aren't scaring users
- enough to take even simple safeguards.
- Dataquest Inc. a marker research firm in San Jose released a
- groundbreaking 150-page survey Monday showing that almost two-thirds of
- business and government orginazatons with more than 300 personal
- computers has encountered a viurs at least once this year. Yet only 15
- percent of them has installed anti-virus software.
- What's more, Dataquest found the virus encounters more than doubled
- in each of the first three quarters of 1991. **<smile, smile>**
- The National Computer Security Association of Washington D.C., which
- represents 1,000 developers of anti-virus software, hired Dataquest to
- conduct what is apparently the first study of virus proliferation by a
- reseacher not directly employed by an anti-virus software company.
- Computer viruses hide themselves in legitamate files, jumping from
- machine to machine. Triggered either at random or on a set date, such
- as Friday the 13th, the most destructive viruses gobble up programs and
- data in their host computers. **gobble???**
- Robert Morris, then a student at Cornell University, unleashed a
- the biggest virus to date in November 1988 **please** when a program he
- intended to queitly slip onto a network call Internet went out of
- control and temporally shut down 6,000 computers at universitys and
- government reaserch labrotorys nationwide. In the wake of the Internet
- case, there were dire predictions of future virus attacks the could
- bring the entire economy grinding to a halt.
- But there haven't been any major virus outbreaks since then and, it
- turnded out, the Internet virus **Internet worm, damn it!!!** did little
- permanent damage.
- What's more, most viruses are relitavely mild - more like a case of
- sniffles the double pnemonia. Typically, these mild viruses take up
- space in the computers memory and slow down operations, but don't
- destroy data. ** :) :( **
- "Many viruses are very innocuous," said Shella Cotter, director of
- software consulting for Dataquest. "You find them, you identify them and
- you get rid of them."
- "Many of the viruses I've heard about have not been big problems,"
- added Jay BloomBecker ** tell me he aint gay **, director of the
- National Center for Computer Crime Data in Santa Cruz. "But it's
- significant enough that if you're not paying attention to it, you
- security is probably inadeqaute."
- Anti-virus software sold over the counter automatcally plucks out
- the most of the roughly, 1,000 viruses identifey thoughout the world.
- Occasoinally however, killer viruses can take over an entire computer
- system and threaten a buisness with massive losses of crucial
- information.
- Dataquest talked to 600 orginazations during October and dicovered
- that 63 percent had encountered at least one virussince the beginning of
- the year. Of these reporting and encounter, 62 percent claimed "a
- definite loss of productivity," although the $70,000 study did not
- tabulate the total cost.
- In the survey group, 9 percent reported a "virus disaster," defined
- as a single incedent affecting 25 or more personal computers or
- diskettes. On average, computers involved in a virus disaster were out
- of commision four days and required reprogramming at a cost of $6,200.
- And, in 3 percent of virus attacks, either the person who introduced
- the virus or the person responible for computer security was threatened
- with dismmisal. Dataquest didn't count how many were actually fired.
- "Computer viruses are much more prevalent than people think and,
- unless we think, and unless we take precautions, over time they are
- going to get worse," said Andrew Seybold, head of the Dataquest servey
- team.
- But anti-virus software and strict enforcement of computer scurity
- policies could change in the future.
- "The good news is, it's solveable. The bad news is companies aren't
- chossing to solve it,", Cotter concluded. ** The other way around for
- us **
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