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  2. ABC (computer virus) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ABC_(computer_virus)

    ABC, discovered in October 1992, is a memory-resident, file-infecting computer virus which infects EXE files and may alter both COM and EXE files. ABC activates on the 13th day of every month. Upon infection, ABC becomes memory-resident at the top of system memory but below the 640 K DOS boundary and hooks interrupts 16 and 1C.

  3. Abraxas (computer virus) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abraxas_(computer_virus)

    Due to a bug in the virus, only the first EXE file in any directory is infected. Abraxas-infected files will become 1,171 bytes in length and contain Abraxas' viral code. The file's date and time in the DOS disk directory listing will be set to the system date and time when infection occurred.

  4. Comparison of computer viruses - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_computer_viruses

    File virus 1987-10 Seattle: Virus coders created many variants of the virus, making Jerusalem one of the largest families of viruses ever created. It even includes many sub-variants and a few sub-sub-variants. WannaCry: WannaCrypt, WannaCryptor Windows Ransomware Cryptoworm 2017 World North Korea: WDEF WDEF A Classic Mac OS 1989.12.15

  5. Acme (computer virus) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Acme_(computer_virus)

    Acme is a computer virus which infects MS-DOS EXE files. Each time an infected file is executed, Acme may infect an EXE in the current directory by creating a hidden 247 byte long read-only COM file with the same base name. (In MS-DOS, if the file extension is not specified, and two files with the same base name exist, one with .COM and one ...

  6. Jerusalem (computer virus) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jerusalem_(computer_virus)

    It can re-infect .EXE files, and will increase the size of already infected .EXE files by 1,808 bytes. [10] Jerusalem-VT1: If the virus is memory-resident, it will delete any file run on Tuesday the 1st. [10] Jerusalem-T13: The virus causes .COM and .EXE files to grow by 1,812 bytes. If the virus is memory-resident, it will delete any program ...

  7. Timeline of computer viruses and worms - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timeline_of_computer...

    September 9: The virus, called "here you have" or "VBMania", is a simple Trojan horse that arrives in the inbox with the odd-but-suggestive subject line "here you have". The body reads "This is The Document I told you about, you can find it Here" or "This is The Free Download Sex Movies, you can find it Here".