By: Elmo Kandel
The Michelangelo virus was the first real appearance
of computer virus hype in the media. Various "experts"
made claims about how widespread the virus was and
how much damage it was going to do when it triggered.
Michelangelo first hit the news in late January,
1992. A customer noticed that computers from Leading
Edge were arriving with the virus pre-installed. The
next day, John McAfee is quoted as saying Michelangelo
was the third most common virus in the world.
Two weeks later, McAfee was quoted again, and this
time he estimated that as many as five million computers
worldwide could be hurt by the virus. This was a big,
impressive number, and journalists ran with it. All
through February, readers were treated to an assortment
of information that was either overblown or just wrong.
For example, several experts reported that the virus
came from bulletin board systems, which is not true--the
virus was spread on infected floppy disks.
One expert advised not shutting computers down on
March 5th, the day before the trigger day. The virus
would only be triggered by actually booting the computer
on the 6th, he said. If the computer was never turned
off, the virus wouldn't have a chance to trigger.
In early March, Intel discovered it was sending the
virus with one of their programs. Several journalists
took the words of McAfee and others, especially the
estimate of five million infected computers, and spun
wilder and wilder predictions of damage.
When March 6th arrived, the world held it's breath,
waiting for the reports of mass destruction of computers...that
never came. Instead of millions of computers, the
virus barely hit a few thousand. AT&T, with 250,000
computers, said the virus affected two systems.
Critics pointed out that the people making the huge
claims stood to profit--because they were also selling
anti-virus programs.