| virus |
a tiny organism that invades and grows in cells and thereby alters their function. Viruses cause a variety of infectious diseases and may also induce some types of cancer.
Ãâó: www.cancercare.mb.ca/MCCSP/mccsp_glossary_e.shtml
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| viruses |
Virus: A virus is a program or code that attaches itself to a legitimate, executable program, and then reproduces itself when that program is run. Worm: A self-contained program (or set of programs) that is able to spread copies of itself to other computer systems. Usually takes place through network connections or email attachments. Trojan Program: A program that neither replicates nor copies itself, but performs some illicit activity when it is run. ...
Ãâó: www.michigan.gov/cybersecurity/0,1607,7-217-34415-...
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| 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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| viruses |
A group of infectious agents consisting primarily of a genome that replicates itself within a host cell by using its nucleic acids to direct the host cell to synthesize more viral nucleic acids and proteins. Comprised of highly organized sequences of nucleic acids, either DNA or RNA, depending on the virus.
Ãâó: www.polytechnic.edu.na/Schools/civil/libraries/glo...
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