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Virus Hoaxes
Radsafers:
Tried to post this information from one of our computer specialists
yesterday - but E-Mail returned it.
Thanks for your e-mail. Fortunately, this IS a hoax.
It is technically impossible for a virus to be embedded
into an e-mail. The only way for a virus to work is for it
to gain control of your CPU. This can happen either through an
executable file (.EXE, .COM, etc.), or through some MS-Word macros.
There have been a flood of these "e-mail virus" alerts lately, but
they are all untrue. There is, however, a virus-like ability with
e-mail, but it is in the "warning" itself. Someone sends a message
to a lot of people claiming some new e-mail virus. The message is
long and involved and suggests that it be sent to everyone the
recipient knows.
Many people, conscious of the threat viruses pose, send the message
to everyone they can think of. Then, these people do the same thing,
and so-on. The infectious nature of these warnings and the time it
takes everyone in the "chain" to read them makes the warning itself
rather virulent.
I recommend that you send my reply to everyone you may have sent the
original message to, and also to the person(s) who sent you the
message.
ps. One note about MS-Word macro viruses: There is a way to write a
virus in the MS-Word macro language. While opening an e-mail NEVER
poses a threat, opening an MS-Word document from an untrusted source
CAN pose a threat. You should never open *junk* MS-Word documents.
(One safe way, though, *might* be to open the Word document in a
different word processor that does not support Visual Basic for
Applications, but I can't guarantee that, as I have never tested the
theory.)
Hope this helps,
James H. Ogden, Jr., Emergency Planner
WIPP Transportation Project
INTERNET Address (jogden@brc1.tdh.state.tx.us)
(512) 834-6688 ext 2041
(512) 834-6654 FAX