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What's
a "Virus"?
Computer
viruses are called viruses because they share some of the traits
of biological viruses. A computer virus passes from computer to
computer like a biological virus passes from person to person.
There are similarities at a deeper level, as well. A biological
virus is not a living thing. A virus is a fragment of DNA inside
a protective jacket. Unlike a cell, a virus has no way to do
anything or to reproduce by itself -- it is not alive. Instead,
a biological virus must inject its DNA into a cell. The viral
DNA then uses the cell's existing machinery to reproduce itself.
In some cases, the cell fills with new viral particles until
it bursts, releasing the virus. In other cases, the new virus
particles bud off the cell one at a time, and the cell remains
alive.
A
computer virus shares some of these traits. A computer virus
must piggyback on top of some other program or document in order
to get executed. Once it is running, it is then able to infect
other programs or documents. Obviously, the analogy between
computer and biological viruses stretches things a bit, but
there are enough similarities that the name sticks.
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