Virus/Malware

Tens of thousands of virus/malware exist, with more being created each day. Although once most common in DOS or Windows, computer viruses today can cause a great amount of damage by exploiting vulnerabilities in corporate networks, email systems and Web sites.

Virus/Malware types

Network viruses

A virus spreading over a network is not, strictly speaking, a network virus. Only some of the virus/malware mentioned above, such as worms, qualify as network viruses. Specifically, network viruses use network protocols, such as TCP, FTP, UDP, HTTP, and email protocols to replicate. They often do not alter system files or modify the boot sectors of hard disks. Instead, network viruses infect the memory of client computers, forcing them to flood the network with traffic, which can cause slowdowns and even complete network failure. Because network viruses remain in memory, they are often undetectable by conventional file I/O based scanning methods.

The OfficeScan firewall works with the Common Firewall Pattern to identify and block network viruses.