By: Elmo Kandel
“Warning!,” the email screams. “There’s
a new virus going around, and Microsoft says it’s
the worst one yet!” After this amazing bit of
hype, the email continues with “Once this virus
infects your system, it will delete all the files
on your hard drive, reset your computer clock, and
make your screen only show green and black!”
Anyone who has made it this far is then asked to
“forward this virus warning to everyone you
know!” and “Delete any emails you get
with the title “Have a nice day!’
This email has all the signs of a virus hoax.
First, viruses are not magical or all-powerful. Yes,
they can damage your data. Viruses have been known
to erase hard drives, delete documents, even forward
classified documents to random email addresses. But,
to date, only one virus (CIH, or Chernobyl) has actually
been able to damage hardware. CIH found a way to overwrite
the BIOS, or read-only memory
Second, viruses are identified by their programming,
and not by the title of the email they’re attached
to. Once word got out to delete every email with that
title, the virus programmer would just change the
subject, and everyone would have to send out another
virus warning, for a whole new virus, that looks exactly
like the old one except for the subject line of the
email.
Third, if Microsoft (or any other big-name company,
for that matter) wanted to get the word out about
a new virus, they would post it on their website,
and not ask everyone to forward emails. Forwarded
emails are very inefficient, because some people only
check their email once a week. By the time they got
the warning, the virus would have triggered and destroyed
their computer!
The best advice about virus hoax warnings is “don’t
pass them along.” The huge flood of useless
emails do as much damage as the viruses they warn
about.