Click
Here
for more articles |
|
|
The
Difference Between Spyware and Viruses |
by:
Kara
Glover |
Feel
free to reprint this article in newsletters
and on
websites, with resource box included. If
you use this
article, please send a brief message to
let me know where
it appeared: kara3334@yahoo.com
Word Count = 420
Word Wrapped to 60 characters per line
URL: http://www.karathecomputertutor.com
Date of copyright: May 2005
The Difference Between Spyware and Viruses
by Kara Glover
kara3334@yahoo.com
Shin, a fictional character whose name means
"faith" or "trust," sits by his laptop in
the living room of his home in Pyongyang,
the capital of North Korea. He is busy at
work for his boss, dictator Kim Jong-il.
His job, to make sure some spyware gets
into specific computers at the Pentagon
so he can gain vital top secret information.
He's particularly interested now that the
United States government suspects his country
might soon conduct its first nuclear test.
With spyware surreptitiously installed on
the computers, he could, for instance, engage
in the practice of keylogging. In other
words, our "trustworthy" Shin could tract
the actual keys on the computer hit by the
Pentagon officials. This would help him
learn their passwords, the content of email
messages, encryption keys, or other means
to bypass security measures at our nation's
defense fortress. Shin's not interested
in crashing computers at the Pentagon or
making them otherwise operable. That would
be too overt and might reveal him. He's
simply after information.
There are other types of spyware, sometimes
called "malware" because they don't actually
spy on your computer habits. They might
instead just barrage you with annoying popups,
for instance. Or they might give you a different
home page that isn't of your choosing, like
one of an advertiser's. But for the moment
those types of malware, or adware as it's
sometimes called, aren't very useful for
Shin. He wants to use spyware that actually
spies.
Over on another part of the globe in Turkey,
a fictional terrorist sits with his own
laptop in a suspected al Qaeda terrist cell.
But he's not out to infect computers with
spyware. That's child's play. He's out to
bring the house down. This story is strictly
hypothetical. But let's say the terrorist
wanted to disrupt the daily hubub at a major
American corporation. He'd infect the computers
with a virus!
The terrorist might try to attack the company's
vast network by inserting a worm into it.
Worms reside in RAM, and travel from machine
to machine and, unlike the classic viruses,
they attack the computers themselves rather
than individual files. Very disruptive.
This type of virus could potentially make
the computers inoperable.
Bring down the goings-on at a major corporation
by spreading a worm through the computer
network, and the terrorist could have a
field day. But let's hope not.
So to summarize, spyware often keeps track
of your computer habits, and viruses are
often out to disable computers in some way.
Hence the difference.
©2005 by Kara Glover
About the author:
Kara Glover is a Computer Tutor and Troubleshooter.
You
can find her online articles, tips, and
tutorials on topics such as
Microsoft Word®, Excel®, and PowerPoint®
at her website:
http://www.karathecomputertutor.com
Circulated by Bandoni
Media
|
|