| -virus |
A tiny organism that multiples within cells and causes disease such as chickenpox, measles, mumps, rubella, pertussis and hepatitis. Viruses are not affected by antibiotics, the drugs used to kill bacteria.
Ãâó: www.nbc.com/nbc/Medical_Investigation/medical_term...
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| -virus |
A virus is a program written to cause mischief or damage to a computer system. A mild virus might only be a slight nuisance, or even amusing. However, most viruses do damage, whether to your files, your registry, or even your hardware. Viruses are hard to detect, easy to propagate, and difficult to remove. Your computer can pick up a virus when you copy a seemingly normal file from a diskette or download it from the Internet.
Ãâó: www.ontrack.com/glossary/
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| -virus |
A program that can infect other programs by modifying them to possibly include an evolved copy of itself.
Ãâó: www.imms.com/cyberglos/
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| -virus |
Self-replicating, malicious code that attaches itself to an application program or other executable system component and leaves no obvious signs of its presence.
Ãâó: www.tecrime.com/0gloss.htm
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| -virus |
A type of infectious agent, much smaller than common microorganisms, several forms of which affect certain kinds of orchids.
Ãâó: www.orchids.com/support/supportGlossary.html
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