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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. Fun.exe virus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fun.exe_virus

    The files show a creation date of 6-23-2008 and show an original name of Olalatheworld.exe and an internal name of Olalatheworld. The files are 124,928 bytes in size. These characteristics can help distinguish the infected files, which is important because some of the names used by the file are names of legitimate Windows files and therefore ...

  4. 5lo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/5lo

    5lo infects resident .EXE files only. When it infects a file, it increases the file size by about 1000-1100 bytes (though a typical value is 1032 bytes. [1]) At the file's direct end, this message can be found (resulting in the virus's name):

  5. 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 ...

  6. Sality - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sality

    Sality is a family of polymorphic file infectors, which target Windows executable files with the extensions .EXE or .SCR. [1] Sality utilizes polymorphic and entry-point obscuring (EPO) techniques to infect files using the following methods: not changing the entry point address of the host, and replacing the original host code at the entry point of the executable with a variable stub to ...

  7. Klez - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Klez

    Klez is a computer worm that propagates via e-mail. [1] It first appeared in October 2001 and was originated in China. [2] A number of variants of the worm exist. The virus (Klez) itself is a Windows PE EXE file of about 65KB, and it operates on WIN32 platforms.