TallyMan wrote:
Dilbert wrote:
Last time I got a virus was in 1991. I was a senior in high school and Michelangelo virus infected all my 5.25" floppy disks.

Ditto that with the addition of one a couple of years ago due to Microsoft being slow to patch a flaw in the exploit of JPG files. While surfing one day the browser suddenly crashed saying it needed to close. I had a bad feeling about it and immediately ran a virus check and sure enough one had hit my computer but was immediately cleaned off.
I remember the Michelangelo virus, I was an IT manager at the time and ended up visiting each of my employers business sites to check every PC. Turned out the infection had come in through someone bringing in a game on an infected 5.25" floppy disk. From that computer it had propagated throughout the organisation via 5.25" disk. That was a wake up call and all the sites subscribed to Dr Solomons anti virus and a company wide anti virus policy adopted.
Edit: I'll just add that while you are right about it "almost always" requiring user intervention or action to let viruses in, it is easy to say that for those of us techies. Those most likely to get infections are those who know less about computer security or those who don't really care anyway. I think if the average computer illiterate granny got a pop up saying their
"computer had caught a virus and they should click this button to allow Microsoft to remove the virus and clean up their computer" they will happily click it allowing the trojan access to their computer. Blissfully unaware that the warning message was not from their own computers operating system. I read that a lot of people have fallen foul to this type of attack recently and had been lured into installing malware or fake anti-virus software.
That happened to me with my old Dell Inspiron 1300 laptop back in '07. I was using M$ Internet Exploder
and Norton anti-virus and all it took was one visit to a questionable site and I got hit with all sorts of malware.....Last time I had a virus was last year I was using Norton 360 and I visited a pr0n-site and
I got hit with something called "generic 187" that Norton did not block and could not remove. I had to scrap
and reinstall my entire XP partition. Since then I use Avast and I have the trial version which requires
active measures on my part to renew and reinstall every few weeks with a full system scan. Web of Trust
is another useful tool for avoiding trouble sites.