Computer Science, asked by Jagadeeshreddy9387, 1 year ago

1. Write at least 3 examples of Trojan horse , worm and boot sector viruses.

Answers

Answered by Ashityenjay1
13
Hey... !!!

What Is a Worm?
A worm is similar to a virus by design and is considered to be a sub-class of a virus. Worms spread from computer to computer, but unlike a virus, it has the capability to travel without any human action. A worm takes advantage of file or information transport features on your system, which is what allows it to travel unaided.
The biggest danger with a worm is its capability to replicate itself on your system, so rather than your computer sending out a single worm, it could send out hundreds or thousands of copies of itself, creating a huge devastating effect. One example would be for a worm to send a copy of itself to everyone listed in your e-mail address book. Then, the worm replicates and sends itself out to everyone listed in each of the receiver's address book, and the manifest continues on down the line.
Due to the copying nature of a worm and its capability to travel across networks the end result in most cases is that the worm consumes too much system memory (or network bandwidth), causing Web servers, network servers and individual computers to stop responding. In recent worm attacks such as the much-talked-about Blaster Worm, the worm has been designed to tunnel into your system and allow malicious users to control your computer remotely.
Fast Facts: Can replicate itself on system, does not require human action to spread.
What Is a Trojan horse?
A Trojan Horse is full of as much trickery as the mythological Trojan Horse it was named after. The Trojan Horse, at first glance will appear to be useful software but will actually do damage once installed or run on your computer. Those on the receiving end of a Trojan Horse are usually tricked into opening them because they appear to be receiving legitimate software or files from a legitimate source.
When a Trojan is activated on your computer, the results can vary. Some Trojans are designed to be more annoying than malicious (like changing your desktop, adding silly active desktop icons) or they can cause serious damage by deleting files and destroying information on your system. Trojans are also known to create a backdoor on your computer that gives malicious users access to your system, possibly allowing confidential or personal information to be compromised. Unlike viruses and worms, Trojans do not reproduce by infecting other files nor do they self-replicate.
Fast Facts: Appears useful but damages system, requires human action to run, do not self-replicate.
What Is a Blended Threat?
Added into the mix, we also have what is called a blended threat. A blended threat is a more sophisticated attack that bundles some of the worst aspects of viruses, worms, Trojan horses and malicious code into one single threat. Blended threats can use server and Internet vulnerabilities to initiate, then transmit and also spread an attack. Characteristics of blended threats are that they cause harm to the infected system or network, they propagates using multiple methods, the attack can come from multiple points, and blended threats also exploit vulnerabilities.
To be considered a blended thread, the attack would normally serve to transport multiple attacks in one payload. For example it wouldn't just launch a DoS attack — it would also, for example, install a backdoor and maybe even damage a local system in one shot. Additionally, blended threats are designed to use multiple modes of transport. So, while a worm may travel and spread through e-mail, a single blended threat could use multiple routes including e-mail, IRC and file-sharing sharing networks.
Lastly, rather than a specific attack on predetermined .exe files, a blended thread could do multiple malicious acts, like modify your exe files, HTML files and registry keys at the same time — basically it can cause damage within several areas of your network at one time.
Blended threats are considered to be the worst risk to security since the inception of viruses, as most blended threats also require no human intervention to propagate.
Fast Facts: Sophisticated, bundles aspects of viruses, worms and Trojan horses, most require no human action.



Hope that helps you..... :)
Answered by agrippa
3

Computer viruses

Explanation:

  • Trojan horse is a code that abuses various vulnerability within the software that is operating on your computer.  
  • Examples of Trojan Virus are Trojan Banker, Trojan down loader and         Trojan DDos.
  • Worms are malware computer programs that copies itself so that it can spread to other devices. It often spreads through computer network and depends on the various security failures on the target computer to access it. The infected machine functions as host to infect other computers. Internet worms, file sharing worms and instant messaging worms are some examples of it.  
  • Boot sector viruses infect the master boot records of hard disks and boot sector of floppy disks
  • It causes boot or data retrieval problems, in some instances the data also disappears from the partitions, and in many cases computers suddenly becomes unstable. Infected computer can also fail to find the hard drive or start up. Stoned and Michelangelo are examples of boot sector virus.

Learn More:

What is computer virus and explain types of computer virus

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