Information Technology

Malicious Software: Worms, Viruses and Spyware Fact Sheet

What is malicious software?

"Computer programs" or "computer software" are recipes of specially coded instructions that tell your computer to do something. You are probably familiar with many common, helpful types of software, such as your computer's operating system (for example, Windows, Mac OS, Linux) or popular software applications like Microsoft Word, the Windows calculator, iPhoto, iTunes, etc.

When someone writes a computer program with the intent to steal information, cause annoyance and mayhem, or conceal what they are doing, we call that program "malicious software". Viruses, worms, trojans, spyware and rootkits are all forms of malicious software. In general, malicious software may:

When malicious software carries some specific traits, computer professionals may give it a special name, such as:

In practice, you will often find a specific name like virus applied to a broad range of malicious software. The important thing to remember is that malicious software may combine any of the traits specified above.

Malicious software is a serious threat to the secure operation of personal computers, particularly PC computers that use the Windows operating system. For protection advice or assistance, please contact the Information Technology Help Desk (xHELP or 713-348-4357) and see the other documents in this series:

 
 
 

 
  
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