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- xThe INIT 1984 Virus
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- The INIT 1984 virus was discovered in the Netherlands and in several
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- locations in the USA in March, 1992.
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- INIT 1984 is a malicious virus. It is designed to trigger if an infected
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- system is restarted on any Friday the 13th in 1991 or later years. The
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- virus damages a large number of folders and files. File and folder names
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- are changed to random 1-8 character strings. File creators and file types
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- are changed to random 4 character strings. This changes the icons
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- associated with the files and destroys the relationships between programs
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- and their documents. Creation and modification dates are changed to Jan.
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- 1, 1904. In addition, the virus can delete a small percentage (<2%) of
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- files.
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- The virus caused significant damage to the hard drives of several users
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- on Friday, March 13, 1992. Because only a relatively small number of
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- reports of damage were received, we hope that the virus is not
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- widespread.
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- The virus only infects INITs (also known as startup documents or system
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- extensions). It does not infect the System file, desktop files, control panel
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- files, applications, or document files. Because INIT files are shared less
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- frequently than are programs, the INIT 1984 virus does not spread as
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- rapidly as most other viruses.
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- The virus spreads from INIT to INIT at startup time.
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- The virus affects all types of Macintoshes. It spreads and causes damage
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- under both System 6 and System 7. On very old Macintoshes (the Mac
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- 128K, 512K, and XL), the virus will cause a crash at startup.
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- If you have an INIT file which is infected by the INIT 1984 virus, when the
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- virus attacks during startup, the Disinfectant INIT beeps ten times, and an
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- alert is presented at the end of the startup sequence. The virus is
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- neutralized and does not spread or cause any damage, but the non-viral
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- part of the infected INIT runs as usual.
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