The worst computer viruses of all time

Thu Mar 20, 2008 12:11PM EDT

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If you haven't experienced a computer virus yet, just wait -- you probably will.

Fortunately, you missed the real heyday of computer viruses when anti-virus software wasn't very widely used, and virus attacks caused millions of dollars in damages overnight. Today's viruses can still be nightmarish, but for the average user, cleanup is considerably easier than it was just a few years ago, when the only solution in many cases was reformatting your hard drive and starting from scratch (and even that didn't do the trick sometimes).

So join me on a trip down memory lane as we revisit some of the worst viruses of all time and count our blessings that our computers are still up and running despite it all. (Though, please note, "worst" is a matter of considerable debate in the security industry, as the number of infected machines and amount of financial loss is always estimated. If you think another virus was worse than these, please post it in the comments to remind us!)

The worst viruses of all time

Brain, 1986
It all started here: Brain was the first "real" virus ever discovered, back in 1986. Brain didn't really hurt your PC, but it launched the malware industry with a bang and gave bad ideas to over 100,000 virus creators for the next 2 decades.

Michelangelo, 1991
The worst MS-DOS virus ever, Michelangelo attacked the boot sector of your hard drive and any floppy drive inserted into the computer, which caused the virus to spread rapidly. After spreading quietly for months, the virus "activated" on March 6, and promptly started destroying data on tens of thousands of computers.

Melissa, 1999
Technically a worm, Melissa (named after a stripper) collapsed entire email systems by causing computers to send mountains of messages to each other. The author of the virus was eventually caught and sentenced to 20 months in prison.

ILOVEYOU, 2000
This was notable for being one of the first viruses to trick users into opening a file, which in this case claimed to be a love letter sent to the recipient. In reality, the file was a VBS script that sent mountains of junk mail and deleted thousands of files. The results were terribly devastating- one estimate holds that 10 percent of all computers were affected, to a cost of $5.5 billion. It remains perhaps the worst worm of all time.

Code Red, 2001
An early "blended threat" attack, Code Red targeted Web servers instead of user machines, defacing websites and later launching denial-of-service attacks on a host of IP addresses, including those of the White House.

Nimda, 2001
Built on Code Red's attack system of finding multiple avenues into machines (email, websites, network connections, and others), Nimda infected both Web servers and user machines. It found paths into computers so effectively that, 22 minutes after it was released, it became the Internet's most widespread virus at the time.

Klez, 2001
An email virus, Klez pioneered spoofing the "From" field in email messages it sent, making it impossible to tell if Bill Gates did or did not really send you that information about getting free money.

Slammer, 2003
Another fast spreader, this worm infected about 75,000 systems in just 10 minutes, slowing the Internet to a crawl (much like Code Red) and shutting down thousands of websites.

MyDoom, 2004
Notable as the fastest-spreading email virus of all time, MyDoom infected computers so they would, in turn, send even more junk mail. In a strange twist, MyDoom was also used to attack the website of SCO Group, a very unpopular company that was suing other companies over its code being used in Linux distributions. 

Storm, 2007
The worst recent virus, Storm spread via email spam with a fake attachment and ultimately infected up to 10 million computers, causing them to join its zombie botnet.

Thanks to Symantec for helping to compile this list.

Comments on The worst computer viruses of all time

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  • 26 Posted by spam99x on Thu Sep 3, 2009 9:34PM EDT Report Abuse

    Sum off u reely nede 2 lurn how 2 rite!

  • 27 Posted by kavdek@snet.net on Thu Sep 3, 2009 4:47PM EDT Report Abuse

    I personally don't know why virus' spread, because they usually send them under such rediculous guises, like Bill Gates giving you free money or an E-Mail from Viagra AND Cialis together. Also, don't click on those ads about casinos or E-Mails from names you don't know that have your address as the subject. If it looks strange, don't click on it.

  • 29 Posted by tennis-rocks@sbcglobal.net on Thu Sep 3, 2009 10:00PM EDT Report Abuse

    I had a computer for about 10 years and it was doing great untill about 2 months ago! One day our anti-virus software expired, and I didnt think to replace it right away. Within one day of it expiring I turned on the computer and there was the deadly blue screen. My computer had a virus. It took me 3 days to finally get my computer to let me into the start screen. Then I had to reload. I finally decided that it was time for a new computer anyways, and this was the time to do this. Thank you so much for posting this article. Oh and nolo_8 there are many ways for virus to enter your computer. Just a simple site like yahoo homepage could have a virus and ruin your computer.

  • 31 Posted by argontechnologies on Thu Sep 3, 2009 2:57PM EDT Report Abuse

    For the guy who asked why a format did not clean up the virus: A boot sector virus resides in the boot sector of your hard drive. Not a area that gets properly wiped during a normal format and reload. You acutully had to delete the partition with a 'fdisk -mbr' (mbr is for master boot record) to get rid of the bug before format and reload. Ah the nostalgia is killing me. Marco Coelho Argon Techbnologies Inc.

  • 32 Posted by greyfreeman666@sbcglobal.net on Thu Sep 3, 2009 4:13PM EDT Report Abuse

    What's this simulated virus you speak of? As I understand it, simply copy and paste that, and add 'test.txt', and save it on desktop or something... Anyway, too bad the Olympic Torch Virus isn't up there. Oh, wait, I forgot, it's fake.

  • 33 Posted by ray.mack@sbcglobal.net on Thu Sep 3, 2009 8:30PM EDT Report Abuse

    You didn't mention the one that hit me the hardest: Funlove. It hit around 2001 and infected NT 4.0 machines. This is one of those that formatting wasn't a solution. By then, we had on the order of 4 service packs. The problem was that formatting the drive required you to reinstall your initial version and then sequentially add those service packs. You needed to be on the network to get all the way through the process, so you were vulnerable until you could get all the way back up and get your virus scan fully running. I finally gave up and bought a retail version of Windows 2000 which solved the problem.

  • 35 Posted by kpflounder on Thu Sep 3, 2009 4:53PM EDT Report Abuse

    Watch out for gaelicum.a our programmer said its one of the worst, since it shuts down your anti virus, then firewall, then kills your .exe files. it doesn't stop there... it deletes your bios, too. You don't lose any info, just all your programs to use your data... *sigh*

  • 36 Posted by digitalfox@att.net on Thu Sep 3, 2009 3:43PM EDT Report Abuse

    I hate to be negative but I have been in IT for over 10 years and I must disagree with this list of the worst malware. There have been many virus strains that have cost people way more than those in the list. CIH, vundo , zlob , msblast, nyb\monkey\junkie, any PE virus, and various trojans keyloggers and rootkits. If anything the malware in the list is what has hurt corporate IT the most. I think that among home users and small business the most pain was caused by msblast, or cih. Those two caused a lot of trouble for my customers. Cih if I recall correctly was the virus that could flash a bios and damage hardware. It caused havoc with motherboards and hard drives by damaging their firmware. This was usually recoverable by reflashing, but on some older machines it was not. I was amazed by this particular virus, and relieved that none like it have emerged since. Msblast rendered any internet connected xp machine unusable by using RPC calls to constantly reboot the system. When msblast came out I had the distinct pleasure of seeing almost every customer on my list in my shop at the same time. we had 250 customers on our list and only 2 techs. I remember that it also used the infected machines to attack ms update servers to prevent download of the patch that would kill it.

  • 37 Posted by miktoned@ameritech.net on Thu Sep 3, 2009 7:20PM EDT Report Abuse

    A couple years ago I made the mistake of leaving the house with my PC turned on and my 14 year old son home alone. I was only running antivirus software at the time and when I returned, I had 3 new icons on my desktop from a porn site his friends at school told him about. I ended up with the Aurora Virus when it first came out. It took like a month it seemed before there where an solutions posted online to get rid of it and by this time I had ended up reformatting my hard drive. It got my attention to start keeping up with PC security.

  • 38 Posted by dpcofhwa@sbcglobal.net on Fri Mar 21, 2008 9:36AM EDT Report Abuse

    The Monkey B Virus was pretty common boot sector virus at one time. It was notorious for being able to create its own protected boot sector and avoid a standard FDISK and FORMAT. It would either reappear or render the drive incapable of being reloaded once formatted. In the early days Norton MacAfee, PC-Cillin, and others only suggested a low level format to remove it. Later a university professor wrote a little freeware program called "Kill Monk" that allowed for a simple clean. I used it on a lot of customers who picked up Monkey B

  • 39 Posted by brett-e-boy@sbcglobal.net on Thu Sep 3, 2009 3:12PM EDT Report Abuse

    The real question is are these people who create these viruses caught and sent to prison for a long time?? Maybe I miss that news, but their penalty should be plastered all over the news and the internet. This is what you get for doing this, think about it do you really want to create this evil thing.

  • 40 Posted by mrbickel@sbcglobal.net on Thu Sep 3, 2009 7:27PM EDT Report Abuse

    One of the worst viruses to me would be the cloning one. It would turn your screen blank and appear a message saying something like this "catch me if you can im the cloner man". I cant remember the exact words but it was pretty big. Robert

  • 41 Posted by growlnroar on Thu Sep 3, 2009 4:13PM EDT Report Abuse

    I remember Sasser. My laptop was never the same after that lameness.

  • 42 Posted by cruz1934@sbcglobal.net on Thu Sep 3, 2009 3:31PM EDT Report Abuse

    I don't no if this is true or not, but I heard that there was a new virus called LIFE IS BEAUTIFUL. It is supposed to have a power point attachment and as soon as you open it a screen pops up saying "Its too late now, your life is no longer beatiful." As soon as that screen goes away, the hacker starts to take contol of your name, where you live, and your credit card number. He calls himself the "Life Owner," and has started to lanch the virus. IF YOU GET THIS EMAIL DELETE IT ASAP!!!!!!!!!!!!!

  • 43 Posted by crane_man@sbcglobal.net on Thu Sep 3, 2009 3:30PM EDT Report Abuse

    dont know how it happens but I once got one that pc would not reconize the hard drive I had to use dban and clean it with DOD deletion tool and then go and format. I fix it put it was a real pain I have know Idea what virus that was that made it do that

  • 44 Posted by o_mccarson@sbcglobal.net on Thu Sep 3, 2009 7:48PM EDT Report Abuse

    SO YOU THINK THATS BAD WAIT TILL THE WORLD SEES------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 666

  • 45 Posted by btickler on Thu Sep 3, 2009 3:14PM EDT Report Abuse

    Ummm, Brain is *far* from the first virus. Viruses do predate Symantec you know ;). In fact, viruses pre-date the IBM PC.

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