Please read this page about computer virus myths. IT is both informative
and entertaining. It was posted earlier by another Bee-liner, but I
thought it would be worth reposting.
http://www.kumite.com/myths/
Eric Abell wrote:
>
> This came to me from a respected source. It is not about bees but it might
> be of concern to all of us.
>
> There is a computer virus that is being sent across the Internet. If you
> receive an email message with the subject line "Deeyenda", DO NOT read
> the message, DELETE it immediately. Someone is sending email under the
> title "Deeyenda" nationwide - so if you get anything like this DON'T
> DOWNLOAD THE FILE! It has a virus that rewrites your hard drive,
> obliterating anything on it.
>
> The virus is being spread throughout the internet, including USENET
> posting, EMAIL, and other internet activities. The reason for all the
> attention is because of the nature of this virus and the potential
> security risks. The virus, referred to as Deeyenda Maddick, performs a
> comprehensive search on your computer, looking for valuable information,
> such as email and login passwords, credit cards, personal info, etc.
> The Deeyenda virus also has the capability to stay memory resident while
> running a host of applications and operation systems, such as Windows
> 3.11 and Windows 95. What this means to Internet users is that when a
> login and PASSWORD are sent to the server, this virus can COPY this
> information and SEND IT OUT TO AN UNKNOWN ADDRESS (varies). The reason
> for this warning is because the Deeyenda virus is virtually
> undetectable. Once attacked, your computer will be unsecure. Although
> it can attack any operating system, this virus is most likely to attack
> those users viewing Java enhanced Web Pages (Netscape 2.0+ and Microsoft
> Internet Explorer 3.0+ which are running on Windows 95) . Researchers
> at Princeton University have found this virus on a number of World Wide
> Web pages and fear its spread. Please pass this on to people outside
> Treasury if you wish, for we must alert the general public to the
> security risk.
>
> Eric
> Eric Abell
> Gibbons, Alberta Canada
> (403) 998 3143
> [log in to unmask]
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