Quote from: Jonzu95 on February 16, 2012, 09:24:21 AMQuote from: Scourge of teh Galaxy on February 16, 2012, 09:18:18 AMThere are LOADS of variants of Jerusalem. It stopped being funny when I hit the tenth one. Now it's hilariousWhat is wrong with you, Scourge? >_<I'm researching viruses. It's certainly more entertaining than Finnish 4chan
Quote from: Scourge of teh Galaxy on February 16, 2012, 09:18:18 AMThere are LOADS of variants of Jerusalem. It stopped being funny when I hit the tenth one. Now it's hilariousWhat is wrong with you, Scourge? >_<
There are LOADS of variants of Jerusalem. It stopped being funny when I hit the tenth one. Now it's hilarious
Two wordsGhostBalls
Quote from: Scourge of teh Galaxy on February 16, 2012, 09:29:18 AMQuote from: Jonzu95 on February 16, 2012, 09:24:21 AMQuote from: Scourge of teh Galaxy on February 16, 2012, 09:18:18 AMThere are LOADS of variants of Jerusalem. It stopped being funny when I hit the tenth one. Now it's hilariousWhat is wrong with you, Scourge? >_<I'm researching viruses. It's certainly more entertaining than Finnish 4chanYou know nothing about finnish 4chan, soo...
Hey guys, do you think I should class the DBase virus under annoying or dangerous?When DBase is executed, it checks if it is already in memory, and if not, becomes resident. It infects .com and .ovl files.When a .dbf file (the main file format of the dBase database management system) is written to while the virus is in memory, the information sent to the file will be garbled. When the file is loaded, the virus will show the file as if it were normal. If the virus is removed after the files have been garbled, they will be permenantly garbled. It may do this to other files whose name ends in .dbf, regardless of whether or not they belong to the dBase program.The virus creates a file named bugs.dat in any directory where .dbf files are stored. This file keeps track of what files were corrupted and what they were corrupted with. When this file has not been written to for 90 days, the virus overwrites the file allocation table and root directory of drives D: to Z:. This section of the virus's code is buggy, and may notIn addition to the damage to .dbf files, programs larger than 63,415 bytes will no longer be loadable.
also lol at most toxic guy around calling others out on this sh**
Quote from: Scourge of teh Galaxy on February 16, 2012, 08:36:48 AMHey guys, do you think I should class the DBase virus under annoying or dangerous?When DBase is executed, it checks if it is already in memory, and if not, becomes resident. It infects .com and .ovl files.When a .dbf file (the main file format of the dBase database management system) is written to while the virus is in memory, the information sent to the file will be garbled. When the file is loaded, the virus will show the file as if it were normal. If the virus is removed after the files have been garbled, they will be permenantly garbled. It may do this to other files whose name ends in .dbf, regardless of whether or not they belong to the dBase program.The virus creates a file named bugs.dat in any directory where .dbf files are stored. This file keeps track of what files were corrupted and what they were corrupted with. When this file has not been written to for 90 days, the virus overwrites the file allocation table and root directory of drives D: to Z:. This section of the virus's code is buggy, and may notIn addition to the damage to .dbf files, programs larger than 63,415 bytes will no longer be loadable.You need to make a thread about this stuff, I find it highly interesting.
Quote from: TheRoyalBadger on February 16, 2012, 02:41:57 PMQuote from: Scourge of teh Galaxy on February 16, 2012, 08:36:48 AMHey guys, do you think I should class the DBase virus under annoying or dangerous?When DBase is executed, it checks if it is already in memory, and if not, becomes resident. It infects .com and .ovl files.When a .dbf file (the main file format of the dBase database management system) is written to while the virus is in memory, the information sent to the file will be garbled. When the file is loaded, the virus will show the file as if it were normal. If the virus is removed after the files have been garbled, they will be permenantly garbled. It may do this to other files whose name ends in .dbf, regardless of whether or not they belong to the dBase program.The virus creates a file named bugs.dat in any directory where .dbf files are stored. This file keeps track of what files were corrupted and what they were corrupted with. When this file has not been written to for 90 days, the virus overwrites the file allocation table and root directory of drives D: to Z:. This section of the virus's code is buggy, and may notIn addition to the damage to .dbf files, programs larger than 63,415 bytes will no longer be loadable.You need to make a thread about this stuff, I find it highly interesting.Where would I even put a thread on viruses? Software and OS?
Anyways. If I find the scanner I'll post it up tomorrow.
I bet she's an ogre enigma. Post nudez and I shall be the judge.
<= change to MANLIER avatarAlso, more helpful sig.
For once the mods did something right
Quote from: Naryar on February 16, 2012, 07:02:15 PM<= change to MANLIER avatarAlso, more helpful sig.you're just mad the people of this forum wont make badass fanart of you
Quote from: kill343gs on February 16, 2012, 07:49:38 PMQuote from: Naryar on February 16, 2012, 07:02:15 PM<= change to MANLIER avatarAlso, more helpful sig.you're just mad the people of this forum wont make badass fanart of youThey will, in time...