How can I protect myself from viruses and such?
The most common viruses are boot sector infectors. You can help protect
yourself against those by write protecting all disks which you do not need
write access to. Definitely keep a set of write protected floppy system
disks. If you get a virus, it will make things much simpler. And, they are
good for coasters. Only kidding.
Scan all incoming files with a recent copy of a good virus scanner. Among
the best are F-Prot, Dr. Solomon's Anti-virus Toolkit, and Thunderbyte
Anti-Virus. AVP is also a good proggie. Using more than one scanner could
be helpful. You may get those one or two viruses that the other guy
happened to miss this month.
New viruses come out at the rate of about 8 per day now. NO scanner can
keep up with them all, but the four mentioned here do the best job of
keeping current. Any _good_ scanner will detect the majority of common
viruses. No virus scanner will detect all viruses.
Right now there are about 5600 known viruses. New ones are written all the
time. If you use a scanner for virus detection, you need to make sure you
get frequent updates. If you rely on behaviour blockers, you should know
that such programs can be bypassed easily by a technique known as
tunnelling.
You may want to use integrity checkers as well as scanners. Keep in mind
that while these can supply added protection, they are not foolproof.
You may want to use a particular kind of scanner, called resident scanners.
Those are programs which stay resident in the computer memory and
constantly monitor program execution (and sometimes even access to the
files containing programs). If you try to execute a program, the resident
scanner receives control and scans it first for known viruses. Only if no
such viruses are found, the program is allowed to execute.
Most virus scanners will not protect you against many kinds of trojans, any
sort of logic bombs, or worms. Theoretically, they _could_ protect you
against logic bombs and/or worms, by addition of scanning strings; however,
this is rarely done.
The best, actually only way, to protect yourself is to know what you have
on your system and make sure what you have there is authorised by you. Make
freqent backups of all important files. Keep your DOS system files write
protected. Write protect all disks that you do not need to write to. If you
do get a virus, don't panic. Call the support department of the company who
supplies your anti-virus product if you aren't sure of what you are doing.
If the company you got your anti-virus software from does not have a good
technical support department, change companies.
The best way to make sure viruses are not spread is not to spread them.
Some people do this intentionally. We discourage this. Viruses aren't cool.
25. Where can I get more information about viruses?
This FAQ answer was written by Theora:
Assembly lanaguage programming books illustrate the (boring) aspect of
replication and have for a long time. The most exciting/interesting thing
about viruses is all the controversy around them. Free speech, legality,
and cute payloads are a lot more interesting than "find first, find next"
calls. You can get information about the technical aspects of viruses, as
well as help if you should happen to get a virus, from the virus-l FAQ,
posted on comp. virus every so often. You can also pick up on the various
debates there. There are alt.virus type newsgroups, but the level of
technical expertise is minimal, and so far at least there has not been a
lot of real "help" for people who want to get -rid- of a virus.
There are a lot of virus experts. To become one, just call yourself one.
Only Kidding. Understanding viruses involves understanding programming,
operating systems, and their interaction. Understanding all of the 'Cult of
Virus' business requires a lot of discernment. There are a number of good
papers available on viruses, and the Cult of Virus; you can get information
on them from just about anyone listed in the virus-l FAQ. The FTP site
ftp.informatik.uni-hamburg.de is a pretty reliable site for proggies and
text.</XMP>
The most common viruses are boot sector infectors. You can help protect
yourself against those by write protecting all disks which you do not need
write access to. Definitely keep a set of write protected floppy system
disks. If you get a virus, it will make things much simpler. And, they are
good for coasters. Only kidding.
Scan all incoming files with a recent copy of a good virus scanner. Among
the best are F-Prot, Dr. Solomon's Anti-virus Toolkit, and Thunderbyte
Anti-Virus. AVP is also a good proggie. Using more than one scanner could
be helpful. You may get those one or two viruses that the other guy
happened to miss this month.
New viruses come out at the rate of about 8 per day now. NO scanner can
keep up with them all, but the four mentioned here do the best job of
keeping current. Any _good_ scanner will detect the majority of common
viruses. No virus scanner will detect all viruses.
Right now there are about 5600 known viruses. New ones are written all the
time. If you use a scanner for virus detection, you need to make sure you
get frequent updates. If you rely on behaviour blockers, you should know
that such programs can be bypassed easily by a technique known as
tunnelling.
You may want to use integrity checkers as well as scanners. Keep in mind
that while these can supply added protection, they are not foolproof.
You may want to use a particular kind of scanner, called resident scanners.
Those are programs which stay resident in the computer memory and
constantly monitor program execution (and sometimes even access to the
files containing programs). If you try to execute a program, the resident
scanner receives control and scans it first for known viruses. Only if no
such viruses are found, the program is allowed to execute.
Most virus scanners will not protect you against many kinds of trojans, any
sort of logic bombs, or worms. Theoretically, they _could_ protect you
against logic bombs and/or worms, by addition of scanning strings; however,
this is rarely done.
The best, actually only way, to protect yourself is to know what you have
on your system and make sure what you have there is authorised by you. Make
freqent backups of all important files. Keep your DOS system files write
protected. Write protect all disks that you do not need to write to. If you
do get a virus, don't panic. Call the support department of the company who
supplies your anti-virus product if you aren't sure of what you are doing.
If the company you got your anti-virus software from does not have a good
technical support department, change companies.
The best way to make sure viruses are not spread is not to spread them.
Some people do this intentionally. We discourage this. Viruses aren't cool.
25. Where can I get more information about viruses?
This FAQ answer was written by Theora:
Assembly lanaguage programming books illustrate the (boring) aspect of
replication and have for a long time. The most exciting/interesting thing
about viruses is all the controversy around them. Free speech, legality,
and cute payloads are a lot more interesting than "find first, find next"
calls. You can get information about the technical aspects of viruses, as
well as help if you should happen to get a virus, from the virus-l FAQ,
posted on comp. virus every so often. You can also pick up on the various
debates there. There are alt.virus type newsgroups, but the level of
technical expertise is minimal, and so far at least there has not been a
lot of real "help" for people who want to get -rid- of a virus.
There are a lot of virus experts. To become one, just call yourself one.
Only Kidding. Understanding viruses involves understanding programming,
operating systems, and their interaction. Understanding all of the 'Cult of
Virus' business requires a lot of discernment. There are a number of good
papers available on viruses, and the Cult of Virus; you can get information
on them from just about anyone listed in the virus-l FAQ. The FTP site
ftp.informatik.uni-hamburg.de is a pretty reliable site for proggies and
text.</XMP>
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