Top Ten Most-Destructive Computer Viruses
Created by amateur hackers, underground crime syndicates and government agencies, these powerful viruses have done serious damage to computer networks worldwide
- By Sharon Weinberger
- Smithsonian.com, March 20, 2012, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 2)
6) MyDoom (2004) MyDoom muscled its way into the malware world in 2004, quickly infecting some one million computers and launching a massive distributed denial of service attack, which overwhelms a target by flooding it with information from multiple systems. The virus spread through email as what appeared to be a bounced message. When the unsuspecting victim opened the email, the malicious code downloaded itself and then pilfered the new victim’s Outlook address book. From there, it spread to the victim’s friends, family and colleagues. MyDoom spread faster than any worm seen prior.
7) Fizzer (2003) By 2003, many worms were spreading over e-mail, but Fizzer was an entirely new creature. If earlier worms, like Code Red (see below), were about mischief, Fizzer was all about money. While some initially dismissed the seriousness of the worm because it wasn’t as fast moving as Code Red, Fizzer was more insidious. “What makes Fizzer stand out is that it's the first instance of a worm created for financial gain,” says Roel Schouwenberg, a senior researcher at Kaspersky, an anti-virus company. “Computers infected with Fizzer started sending out pharmacy spam.” In other words, Fizzer didn’t just take over your address book to spread for the sake of spreading, it used your address book to send out the now familiar porn and pills spam. Fizzer was followed by better-known spam-inducing worms, like SoBig, which became threatening enough that Microsoft even offered a $250,000 bounty for information leading to the arrest of its creator.
8) Slammer (2003) In January 2003, the fast-spreading Slammer proved that an Internet worm could disrupt private and public services, a harbinger for future mayhem. Slammer works by releasing a deluge of network packets, units of data transmitted over the Internet, bringing the Internet on many servers to a near screeching halt. Through a classic denial of service attack, Slammer had a quite real effect on key services. Among its list of victims: Bank of America’s ATMs, a 911 emergency response system in Washington State, and perhaps most disturbingly, a nuclear plant in Ohio.
9) Code Red (2001) Compared to modern malware, Code Red seems like an almost kinder, gentler version of a threat. But when it swept across computers worldwide in 2001, it caught security experts off guard by exploiting a flaw in Microsoft Internet Information Server. That allowed the worm to deface and take down some websites. Perhaps most memorably, Code Red successfully brought down the whitehouse.gov website and forced other government agencies to temporarily take down their own public websites as well. Though later worms have since overshadowed Code Red, it’s still remembered by anti-virus experts as a turning point for malware because of its rapid spread.
10) Love Letter/I LOVE YOU (2000) Back in 2000, millions of people made the mistake of opening an innocent looking email attachment labeled simply, “I Love You.” Instead of revealing the heartfelt confession of a secret admirer, as perhaps readers had hoped, the file unleashed a malicious program that overwrote the users’ image files. Then like an old-fashioned chain letter gone nuclear, the virus e-mailed itself to the first 50 contacts in the user’s Windows address book. While by today’s standards, Love Letter is almost quaint, it did cause wide-scale problems for computer users. It only took hours for Love Letter to become a global pandemic, in part because it played on a fundamental human emotion: the desire to be loved. In that sense, Love Letter could be considered the first socially engineered computer virus.
Sharon Weinberger is a national security reporter based in Washington, D.C.
Subscribe now for more of Smithsonian's coverage on history, science and nature.









Comments (23)
+ View All Comments
What is the best antivirus of all virus
Posted by hari on April 23,2013 | 10:25 PM
what about CIH Chernobyl? didn't stop after ruininig your fat sector, then it deleted the bios. this equals dead computer for those without an eprom programmer.....
Posted by Andreas Huge on March 1,2013 | 04:54 PM
Well "Computer Virus" is misleading name - such thing does not exist - All of them are Microsoft Windows viruses, aren't they.
Posted by jeremy on February 27,2013 | 06:25 AM
What about the Morris worm? The first should always be mentioned.
Posted by joe on February 26,2013 | 08:41 PM
Eventhough truely speaking my "over interest in programming" make me to be fasinated by these virus - because somehow I find these viruses cool and amazingly thinked - I was actually wondering. . . Why cant we have a security code which would request the virus programmers name, so he/she would be easly noted or spotted and jailled? Or any othe secure way to prevent the virus maker!
Posted by Nicholaus Ludwe on February 20,2013 | 05:17 PM
those of you that are giving the computer virus this proverbs goes like this everyday for the thief one day for the owner
Posted by akinbinu temitope on January 16,2013 | 03:38 PM
virus is to bad for my liking ,i will advice those people that causes virus to the computer to stop and we computer users we should have anti virus in our computer
Posted by akinbinu temitope on January 16,2013 | 03:30 PM
always check on your computer to avoid virus
Posted by akinbinu temitope on January 16,2013 | 03:19 PM
I keep my computer up to date so that it will not get a virus if it gets slow I have it checked out or start deleting unwanted files in my inbox
Posted by Orbreyhopkins on January 13,2013 | 09:36 PM
This teaches me to be careule of what download and open on my computer!
Posted by Lindsey Barnett on January 11,2013 | 04:52 PM
Do not download a virus.
Posted by camaron Lapach on January 10,2013 | 12:51 PM
In The Art of War, Sun Tzu advises that “to know your Enemy, you must become your Enemy.” In order to pre-empt the seriousness and inner workings of the next big threat on the horizon posed by proliferating viruses and elusive malware, computer security companies could deploy the expertise of the apprehended authors of these insidious instruments of harm. If insider knowledge is not available, using computer modelling and legitimate programmers to generate viruses and malware to inform the development of counter-attack strategies could better inoculate computer security systems.
Posted by Joseph Y Ting on January 4,2013 | 12:53 PM
viruses are one way of getting income... so...
Posted by ghon garang(jonas) on January 2,2013 | 07:47 AM
i love studying on viruses and i think smithsonian.com is the best site on learning it.
Posted by Tushar Halder on October 28,2012 | 04:28 AM
+ View All Comments