Portal:Computer security
Template:/box-header The jdbgmgr.exe virus hoax involved an e-mail spam in 2002 that advised computer users to delete a file named jdbgmgr.exe because it was a computer virus. jdbgmgr.exe, which had a little teddy bear-like icon (The Microsoft Bear), was actually a valid Microsoft Windows file, the Debugger Registrar for Java (also known as Java Debug Manager, hence jdbgmgr).
Featuring so odd an icon among normally dull system icons had an unexpected counterpoint: an email hoax warning users that this is a virus that somehow came into your computer and should be deleted. This hoax has taken many forms and is always very popular among non-expert users that find this icon suspicious.
The email has taken many forms, including saying its purpose was to warn Hotmail users of a virus spreading via MSN Messenger, or even to alert about a possible virus in the orkut web community. All say that it was not detected by McAfee or Norton AntiVirus, which is obviously true.
This email in fact could be considered some kind of virus as it has the normal life cycle of a computer virus: It comes through user mailboxes, harms the system (by deleting a file), after which the message is forwarded to multiple recipients to reinfect them. Most important, all these commands are executed by the user, making it a fail-proof virus (c.f. honor system virus).
Beast, a Windows-based backdoor Trojan horse. Template:/box-footer
Template:/box-header Bruce Schneier (born January 15, 1963, pronounced "shn-EYE-er") is an American cryptographer, computer security specialist, and writer. He is the author of several books on computer security and cryptography, and is the founder and chief technology officer of BT Counterpane, formerly Counterpane Internet Security, Inc.
Schneier's Applied Cryptography is a popular reference work for cryptography. Schneier has designed or co-designed several cryptographic algorithms, including the Blowfish, Twofish and MacGuffin block ciphers, the Helix and Phelix stream ciphers, and the Yarrow and Fortuna cryptographically secure pseudo-random number generators. Solitaire is a cryptographic algorithm developed by Schneier for use by people without access to a computer, called Pontifex in Neal Stephenson's novel Cryptonomicon. In October 2008, Schneier, together with seven others, introduced the Skein hash function family, a more secure and efficient alternative to older algorithms. [1]
- ...that Sasser.E removed all other variants of itself before taking over?
- ...that Storm Botnet used custom peer-to-peer communication protocol called Stormnet?
- ...that the Monte Carlo method is named after the Monte Carlo casino and was invented by physicists working on nuclear weapons projects in the Los Alamos National Laboratory?
References
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