| Wormley's test |
see under test.
Ãâó: www.mercksource.com/pp/us/cns/cns_health_library.j...
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| worm |
A computer program which replicates itself and is self-propagating. Worms, as opposed to viruses, are meant to spawn in network environments. Network worms were first defined by Shoch & Hupp of Xerox in ACM Communications (March 1982). The Internet worm of November 1988 is perhaps the most famous; it successfully propagated itself on over 6,000 systems across the Internet.
Ãâó: www.red.net/glossary/w.php
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| worm |
A worm is a program that spreads over network. Unlike a virus, worm does not attach itself to a host program.
Ãâó: www.infosec.gov.hk/english/general/glossary_uw.htm
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| worm |
A worm is a self-contained program that spreads by creating multiple copies of itself. Unlike viruses, worms do not require a host file. Common modes of transmission used by worms include: E-mail, IRC, Peer to Peer file sharing, and Network drives.
Ãâó: www.voiceanddata.com.au/vd/admin/glossary.asp
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| worm |
A destructive computer program that replicates itself throughout your computer's hard drive and and memory. Worms use up the computers resources and pull the system down. Worms can be spread in mass-e-mailing if the user opens an attachment.
Ãâó: members.cox.net/vmontecino/netterms.htm
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