Sign up for our FREE newsletter to stay informed and keep up to date on the newest spyware, adware, virus and security threats!
We will never sell or use your email address for anything other than this newsletter and you can unsubscribe at any time.
E-mail Address:
SIGN UP TODAY AND WE'LL TELL YOU HOW TO STOP SPYWARE FOR FREE!!
Our #1 Security Tip: Use FIREFOX instead of Internet Explorer and PREVENT Spyware! FireFox is free and considered the best free, safe web browser available today.
Spyware and Adware Removal info Spyware and Adware Removal info Spyware and Adware Removal info

Spyware Home | Spyware Articles | Contact Us | Spyware Tools | Forum

Spyware Resources

Featured Spyware Article


Countering Privacy Invasions of Spyware
Spyware spread quickly across the internet world forcing users to become aware of the prevalent threats facing their privacy while surfing the internet. A PC will begin to run slower, have difficulty accessing the internet, have a reduced bandwidth,...

Spyware - now a problem for Mac users as well
Spyware is no longer a problem just for PC users running Windows. Learn more about the new Spyware designed to infect Mac, and how to protect your computer from intruders Fortunately for the Mac users, the Adware and Spyware industry is still, as...


Eliminate Adware and Spyware
Everyone should eliminate spyware and adware from your hard drive for your computer privacy protection. Spyware and adware programs also slow down the speed of your computer by cluttering your hard drive with annoying programs. Once you eliminate...

How to Fight Spyware
If you are wondering how to fight spyware for safe web surfing, this Internet privacy article will answer some of your questions. By now you have probably heard about the dangers of spyware. Spyware has become so common, it has now moved ahead of...

Spyware Links


Detect Key Logger, Identity Theft Spyware

How To Avoid Becoming A Victim of Identity Theft

How To Recognize The Telltale Signs Of Spyware

Internet Privacy

Secure Your PC In 7 Steps And Only Using Free Software While Not Missing The One Critical Piece Of Free Software That's Been Overlooked By Many.

Spyware - Is Your Computer Safe?

Spyware versus Adware; the Difference Impacts Your Privacy

The Mafia & Spyware

The Spy Who Robbed Me: What You Need To Know About Spyware

Top 10 Ways To Protect Yourself From Computer Viruses

What Every Internet Marketer Should Know About Spyware

What Is Spyware?

Join Mailing List

E-Mail Address:
First Name:
Last Name:

Sponsored Links




The Difference Between Spyware and Viruses
Kara Glover
Feel free to reprint this article in newsletters and on
websites, with resource box included. If you use this
article, please send a brief message to let me know where
it appeared: kara3334@yahoo.com

Word Count = 420
Word Wrapped to 60 characters per line
URL: http://www.karathecomputertutor.com
Date of copyright: May 2005


The Difference Between Spyware and Viruses
by Kara Glover
kara3334@yahoo.com

Shin, a fictional character whose name means "faith" or "trust," sits by his laptop in the living room of his home in Pyongyang, the capital of North Korea. He is busy at work for his boss, dictator Kim Jong-il. His job, to make sure some spyware gets into specific computers at the Pentagon so he can gain vital top secret information. He's particularly interested now that the United States government suspects his country might soon conduct its first nuclear test.

With spyware surreptitiously installed on the computers, he could, for instance, engage in the practice of keylogging. In other words, our "trustworthy" Shin could tract the actual keys on the computer hit by the Pentagon officials. This would help him learn their passwords, the content of email messages, encryption keys, or other means to bypass security measures at our nation's defense fortress. Shin's not interested in crashing computers at the Pentagon or making them otherwise operable. That would be too overt and might reveal him. He's simply after information.

There are other types of spyware, sometimes called "malware" because they don't actually spy on your computer habits. They might instead just barrage you with annoying popups, for instance. Or they might give you a different home page that isn't of your choosing, like one of an advertiser's. But for the moment those types of malware, or adware as it's sometimes called, aren't very useful for Shin. He wants to use spyware that actually spies.

Over on another part of the globe in Turkey, a fictional terrorist sits with his own laptop in a suspected al Qaeda terrist cell. But he's not out to infect computers with spyware. That's child's play. He's out to bring the house down. This story is strictly hypothetical. But let's say the terrorist wanted to disrupt the daily hubub at a major American corporation. He'd infect the computers with a virus!

The terrorist might try to attack the company's vast network by inserting a worm into it. Worms reside in RAM, and travel from machine to machine and, unlike the classic viruses, they attack the computers themselves rather than individual files. Very disruptive. This type of virus could potentially make the computers inoperable.

Bring down the goings-on at a major corporation by spreading a worm through the computer network, and the terrorist could have a field day. But let's hope not.

So to summarize, spyware often keeps track of your computer habits, and viruses are often out to disable computers in some way. Hence the difference.

©2005 by Kara Glover





About the author:

Kara Glover is a Computer Tutor and Troubleshooter. You
can find her online articles, tips, and tutorials on topics such as
Microsoft Word®, Excel®, and PowerPoint® at her website:
http://www.karathecomputertutor.com



© 2006 www.dugancom.com All Rights Reserved

Hosting by DD&C
SearchMotron.com