How many OS/2 viruses were there?
When I was in college, I remember IBM representatives trying to sell OS/2 Warp to students and teachers by saying that there were no (known) viruses for OS/2. (Of course, that didn't stop the makers of IBM AntiVirus for OS/2 and Norton AntiVirus for OS/2.)
The paper "The effect of computer viruses on OS/2 and Warp" (presented in September 1995 by John F. Morar and David M. Chess of the IBM Thomas J. Watson Research Center) mentions that there "are currently only two OS/2 viruses known to us."
Is there any reference that states how many native OS/2 viruses there were by the time IBM discontinued its support for OS/2 (on December 31, 2006)?
ibm operating-system
New contributor
add a comment |
When I was in college, I remember IBM representatives trying to sell OS/2 Warp to students and teachers by saying that there were no (known) viruses for OS/2. (Of course, that didn't stop the makers of IBM AntiVirus for OS/2 and Norton AntiVirus for OS/2.)
The paper "The effect of computer viruses on OS/2 and Warp" (presented in September 1995 by John F. Morar and David M. Chess of the IBM Thomas J. Watson Research Center) mentions that there "are currently only two OS/2 viruses known to us."
Is there any reference that states how many native OS/2 viruses there were by the time IBM discontinued its support for OS/2 (on December 31, 2006)?
ibm operating-system
New contributor
3
"Is there any reference that states" saves this from being a list question. Well-written, and probably a good question for this site!
– wizzwizz4♦
13 hours ago
1
The anti-virus programs for OS/2 seem to have been intended for use on OS/2 servers which provided services to DOS or Windows machines. Catching viruses before they were served would have been valuable.
– John Dallman
11 hours ago
add a comment |
When I was in college, I remember IBM representatives trying to sell OS/2 Warp to students and teachers by saying that there were no (known) viruses for OS/2. (Of course, that didn't stop the makers of IBM AntiVirus for OS/2 and Norton AntiVirus for OS/2.)
The paper "The effect of computer viruses on OS/2 and Warp" (presented in September 1995 by John F. Morar and David M. Chess of the IBM Thomas J. Watson Research Center) mentions that there "are currently only two OS/2 viruses known to us."
Is there any reference that states how many native OS/2 viruses there were by the time IBM discontinued its support for OS/2 (on December 31, 2006)?
ibm operating-system
New contributor
When I was in college, I remember IBM representatives trying to sell OS/2 Warp to students and teachers by saying that there were no (known) viruses for OS/2. (Of course, that didn't stop the makers of IBM AntiVirus for OS/2 and Norton AntiVirus for OS/2.)
The paper "The effect of computer viruses on OS/2 and Warp" (presented in September 1995 by John F. Morar and David M. Chess of the IBM Thomas J. Watson Research Center) mentions that there "are currently only two OS/2 viruses known to us."
Is there any reference that states how many native OS/2 viruses there were by the time IBM discontinued its support for OS/2 (on December 31, 2006)?
ibm operating-system
ibm operating-system
New contributor
New contributor
New contributor
asked 16 hours ago
Joel Reyes Noche
1214
1214
New contributor
New contributor
3
"Is there any reference that states" saves this from being a list question. Well-written, and probably a good question for this site!
– wizzwizz4♦
13 hours ago
1
The anti-virus programs for OS/2 seem to have been intended for use on OS/2 servers which provided services to DOS or Windows machines. Catching viruses before they were served would have been valuable.
– John Dallman
11 hours ago
add a comment |
3
"Is there any reference that states" saves this from being a list question. Well-written, and probably a good question for this site!
– wizzwizz4♦
13 hours ago
1
The anti-virus programs for OS/2 seem to have been intended for use on OS/2 servers which provided services to DOS or Windows machines. Catching viruses before they were served would have been valuable.
– John Dallman
11 hours ago
3
3
"Is there any reference that states" saves this from being a list question. Well-written, and probably a good question for this site!
– wizzwizz4♦
13 hours ago
"Is there any reference that states" saves this from being a list question. Well-written, and probably a good question for this site!
– wizzwizz4♦
13 hours ago
1
1
The anti-virus programs for OS/2 seem to have been intended for use on OS/2 servers which provided services to DOS or Windows machines. Catching viruses before they were served would have been valuable.
– John Dallman
11 hours ago
The anti-virus programs for OS/2 seem to have been intended for use on OS/2 servers which provided services to DOS or Windows machines. Catching viruses before they were served would have been valuable.
– John Dallman
11 hours ago
add a comment |
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
I have not found a reference, but here's a search for OS/2 on Trend Micro's virus encyclopedia. That finds 30 entries, some of which are actual OS/2 viruses, and some of which are interesting OS/2 security vulnerabilities.
Thanks. It did not occur to me to search a virus encyclopedia.
– Joel Reyes Noche
6 hours ago
add a comment |
The cited source from the question is the source for the English Wikipedia page as well, that claims that there are only very few known viruses for that system.
But the low amount of viruses seems to be much bigger.
Not two, but at least five viruses are well known. That's more than double.
Arelocs also known as Aep is one of a few viruses for IBM's OS/2 operating system. It is considered "the first known virus that affects OS/2 files in the 'right way'" as it writes itself to the file and modifies the NewEXE header and other system areas.
Type File virus
Creator Mark Ludwig
Date Discovered 1995
Place of Origin Show Low, Arizona, USA
Source Language
Platform OS/2
File Type(s) .dll, .exe
Jiskefet
Jiskefet is a rare example of an OS/2 virus. It was coded by Masud Khafir, who named it after a Dutch comedy troupe.
Type File virus
Creator Masud Khafir
Date Discovered 1994
Place of Origin The Netherlands
Source Language Assembly
Platform OS/2
File Type(s) .exe
Infection Length 2,048 bytes
Myname is an OS/2 virus. When executed, the virus infects OS/2 NewEXE files, overwriting them. While the virus has no malicious payload, the overwriting of the files damages them irreparably.
Type File virus
Creator
Date Discovered 1993.12
Place of Origin United States
Source Language
Platform OS/2
File Type(s) .exe
Infection Length 2,048 bytes
Rexx is a virus for OS/2. Very little information is available about the virus. Our tests seem to show it overwrites files it infects.
Rexx is also the name of a scripting language. It predates OS/2 appearing in 1979 and it was the primary scripting language for that OS, along with Amiga and a few others.
Type File virus
Creator
Date Discovered
Place of Origin
Source Language
Platform OS/2
File Type(s) .exe
Infection Length 38,620 bytes
Reported Costs
Uxia is an OS/2 virus. All that seems to be known about it any more is that it is 7,200 bytes long and for IBM's OS/2.
Type File virus
Creator
Date Discovered
Place of Origin
Source Language
Platform OS/2
Infection Length 7,200 bytes
Reported Costs
As we know there is something like
IBM AntiVirus Version 2.5 running on OS/2. Advertised as:
So, tell me how does it work really?
In a nutshell, pretty darn well. Over the years as a network administrator, I have taken a few viruses prisoner. Since I found these in "the wild" I used them for my "live" testing. The FORM virus is probably the most common boot sector virus in the wild.
But what is FORM? A DOS virus:
Form is a boot sector virus from the 1990's. It often topped charts for the most common virus. Form was extremely long-lived, on the list of viruses in the wild up until 2006, 16 years after its initial release.
Type Boot sector virus
Creator
Date Discovered 1990.02
Place of Origin Zurich, Switzerland
Source Language Assembly
Platform DOS
Infection Length 3 disk sectors
Reported Costs
That seems to narrow down the viruses truly and specifically targeting OS/2 only to be quite small. But:
Dr. Solomon's Anti-Virus Toolkit for OS/2 - by Noah Sumner (1997)
If you are like the vast majority of OS/2 users you think you don't need an anti-virus program. We all know that DOS viruses can't affect OS/2, right? Wrong. The experts tell me that there are probably somewhere around 200 viruses that can and will affect you even if you are running OS/2 under HPFS. If you are running under FAT that number is much higher.
Well, at least none of them will really attack OS/2, right? Wrong again. There are currently three known viruses that are designed to attack OS/2 users only, and if Warp 4 is a success that number will start to rise.
Now you are probably saying, "Well, maybe I should protect myself from viruses." That is where our good friend from Dr. Solomon comes in to play. Why should you use Dr. Solomon's Anti-Virus for OS/2? Here are three good reasons:
it detects the OS/2 viruses (IBM's Anti-Virus doesn't)
it has a nice PM interface
it is truly 32 bit.
Thanks for the links to The Virus Encyclopedia and OS/2 e-Zine.
– Joel Reyes Noche
6 hours ago
add a comment |
Your Answer
StackExchange.ready(function() {
var channelOptions = {
tags: "".split(" "),
id: "648"
};
initTagRenderer("".split(" "), "".split(" "), channelOptions);
StackExchange.using("externalEditor", function() {
// Have to fire editor after snippets, if snippets enabled
if (StackExchange.settings.snippets.snippetsEnabled) {
StackExchange.using("snippets", function() {
createEditor();
});
}
else {
createEditor();
}
});
function createEditor() {
StackExchange.prepareEditor({
heartbeatType: 'answer',
autoActivateHeartbeat: false,
convertImagesToLinks: false,
noModals: true,
showLowRepImageUploadWarning: true,
reputationToPostImages: null,
bindNavPrevention: true,
postfix: "",
imageUploader: {
brandingHtml: "Powered by u003ca class="icon-imgur-white" href="https://imgur.com/"u003eu003c/au003e",
contentPolicyHtml: "User contributions licensed under u003ca href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/"u003ecc by-sa 3.0 with attribution requiredu003c/au003e u003ca href="https://stackoverflow.com/legal/content-policy"u003e(content policy)u003c/au003e",
allowUrls: true
},
noCode: true, onDemand: true,
discardSelector: ".discard-answer"
,immediatelyShowMarkdownHelp:true
});
}
});
Joel Reyes Noche is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function () {
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
});
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
StackExchange.ready(
function () {
StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fretrocomputing.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f8581%2fhow-many-os-2-viruses-were-there%23new-answer', 'question_page');
}
);
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
I have not found a reference, but here's a search for OS/2 on Trend Micro's virus encyclopedia. That finds 30 entries, some of which are actual OS/2 viruses, and some of which are interesting OS/2 security vulnerabilities.
Thanks. It did not occur to me to search a virus encyclopedia.
– Joel Reyes Noche
6 hours ago
add a comment |
I have not found a reference, but here's a search for OS/2 on Trend Micro's virus encyclopedia. That finds 30 entries, some of which are actual OS/2 viruses, and some of which are interesting OS/2 security vulnerabilities.
Thanks. It did not occur to me to search a virus encyclopedia.
– Joel Reyes Noche
6 hours ago
add a comment |
I have not found a reference, but here's a search for OS/2 on Trend Micro's virus encyclopedia. That finds 30 entries, some of which are actual OS/2 viruses, and some of which are interesting OS/2 security vulnerabilities.
I have not found a reference, but here's a search for OS/2 on Trend Micro's virus encyclopedia. That finds 30 entries, some of which are actual OS/2 viruses, and some of which are interesting OS/2 security vulnerabilities.
answered 10 hours ago
John Dallman
55327
55327
Thanks. It did not occur to me to search a virus encyclopedia.
– Joel Reyes Noche
6 hours ago
add a comment |
Thanks. It did not occur to me to search a virus encyclopedia.
– Joel Reyes Noche
6 hours ago
Thanks. It did not occur to me to search a virus encyclopedia.
– Joel Reyes Noche
6 hours ago
Thanks. It did not occur to me to search a virus encyclopedia.
– Joel Reyes Noche
6 hours ago
add a comment |
The cited source from the question is the source for the English Wikipedia page as well, that claims that there are only very few known viruses for that system.
But the low amount of viruses seems to be much bigger.
Not two, but at least five viruses are well known. That's more than double.
Arelocs also known as Aep is one of a few viruses for IBM's OS/2 operating system. It is considered "the first known virus that affects OS/2 files in the 'right way'" as it writes itself to the file and modifies the NewEXE header and other system areas.
Type File virus
Creator Mark Ludwig
Date Discovered 1995
Place of Origin Show Low, Arizona, USA
Source Language
Platform OS/2
File Type(s) .dll, .exe
Jiskefet
Jiskefet is a rare example of an OS/2 virus. It was coded by Masud Khafir, who named it after a Dutch comedy troupe.
Type File virus
Creator Masud Khafir
Date Discovered 1994
Place of Origin The Netherlands
Source Language Assembly
Platform OS/2
File Type(s) .exe
Infection Length 2,048 bytes
Myname is an OS/2 virus. When executed, the virus infects OS/2 NewEXE files, overwriting them. While the virus has no malicious payload, the overwriting of the files damages them irreparably.
Type File virus
Creator
Date Discovered 1993.12
Place of Origin United States
Source Language
Platform OS/2
File Type(s) .exe
Infection Length 2,048 bytes
Rexx is a virus for OS/2. Very little information is available about the virus. Our tests seem to show it overwrites files it infects.
Rexx is also the name of a scripting language. It predates OS/2 appearing in 1979 and it was the primary scripting language for that OS, along with Amiga and a few others.
Type File virus
Creator
Date Discovered
Place of Origin
Source Language
Platform OS/2
File Type(s) .exe
Infection Length 38,620 bytes
Reported Costs
Uxia is an OS/2 virus. All that seems to be known about it any more is that it is 7,200 bytes long and for IBM's OS/2.
Type File virus
Creator
Date Discovered
Place of Origin
Source Language
Platform OS/2
Infection Length 7,200 bytes
Reported Costs
As we know there is something like
IBM AntiVirus Version 2.5 running on OS/2. Advertised as:
So, tell me how does it work really?
In a nutshell, pretty darn well. Over the years as a network administrator, I have taken a few viruses prisoner. Since I found these in "the wild" I used them for my "live" testing. The FORM virus is probably the most common boot sector virus in the wild.
But what is FORM? A DOS virus:
Form is a boot sector virus from the 1990's. It often topped charts for the most common virus. Form was extremely long-lived, on the list of viruses in the wild up until 2006, 16 years after its initial release.
Type Boot sector virus
Creator
Date Discovered 1990.02
Place of Origin Zurich, Switzerland
Source Language Assembly
Platform DOS
Infection Length 3 disk sectors
Reported Costs
That seems to narrow down the viruses truly and specifically targeting OS/2 only to be quite small. But:
Dr. Solomon's Anti-Virus Toolkit for OS/2 - by Noah Sumner (1997)
If you are like the vast majority of OS/2 users you think you don't need an anti-virus program. We all know that DOS viruses can't affect OS/2, right? Wrong. The experts tell me that there are probably somewhere around 200 viruses that can and will affect you even if you are running OS/2 under HPFS. If you are running under FAT that number is much higher.
Well, at least none of them will really attack OS/2, right? Wrong again. There are currently three known viruses that are designed to attack OS/2 users only, and if Warp 4 is a success that number will start to rise.
Now you are probably saying, "Well, maybe I should protect myself from viruses." That is where our good friend from Dr. Solomon comes in to play. Why should you use Dr. Solomon's Anti-Virus for OS/2? Here are three good reasons:
it detects the OS/2 viruses (IBM's Anti-Virus doesn't)
it has a nice PM interface
it is truly 32 bit.
Thanks for the links to The Virus Encyclopedia and OS/2 e-Zine.
– Joel Reyes Noche
6 hours ago
add a comment |
The cited source from the question is the source for the English Wikipedia page as well, that claims that there are only very few known viruses for that system.
But the low amount of viruses seems to be much bigger.
Not two, but at least five viruses are well known. That's more than double.
Arelocs also known as Aep is one of a few viruses for IBM's OS/2 operating system. It is considered "the first known virus that affects OS/2 files in the 'right way'" as it writes itself to the file and modifies the NewEXE header and other system areas.
Type File virus
Creator Mark Ludwig
Date Discovered 1995
Place of Origin Show Low, Arizona, USA
Source Language
Platform OS/2
File Type(s) .dll, .exe
Jiskefet
Jiskefet is a rare example of an OS/2 virus. It was coded by Masud Khafir, who named it after a Dutch comedy troupe.
Type File virus
Creator Masud Khafir
Date Discovered 1994
Place of Origin The Netherlands
Source Language Assembly
Platform OS/2
File Type(s) .exe
Infection Length 2,048 bytes
Myname is an OS/2 virus. When executed, the virus infects OS/2 NewEXE files, overwriting them. While the virus has no malicious payload, the overwriting of the files damages them irreparably.
Type File virus
Creator
Date Discovered 1993.12
Place of Origin United States
Source Language
Platform OS/2
File Type(s) .exe
Infection Length 2,048 bytes
Rexx is a virus for OS/2. Very little information is available about the virus. Our tests seem to show it overwrites files it infects.
Rexx is also the name of a scripting language. It predates OS/2 appearing in 1979 and it was the primary scripting language for that OS, along with Amiga and a few others.
Type File virus
Creator
Date Discovered
Place of Origin
Source Language
Platform OS/2
File Type(s) .exe
Infection Length 38,620 bytes
Reported Costs
Uxia is an OS/2 virus. All that seems to be known about it any more is that it is 7,200 bytes long and for IBM's OS/2.
Type File virus
Creator
Date Discovered
Place of Origin
Source Language
Platform OS/2
Infection Length 7,200 bytes
Reported Costs
As we know there is something like
IBM AntiVirus Version 2.5 running on OS/2. Advertised as:
So, tell me how does it work really?
In a nutshell, pretty darn well. Over the years as a network administrator, I have taken a few viruses prisoner. Since I found these in "the wild" I used them for my "live" testing. The FORM virus is probably the most common boot sector virus in the wild.
But what is FORM? A DOS virus:
Form is a boot sector virus from the 1990's. It often topped charts for the most common virus. Form was extremely long-lived, on the list of viruses in the wild up until 2006, 16 years after its initial release.
Type Boot sector virus
Creator
Date Discovered 1990.02
Place of Origin Zurich, Switzerland
Source Language Assembly
Platform DOS
Infection Length 3 disk sectors
Reported Costs
That seems to narrow down the viruses truly and specifically targeting OS/2 only to be quite small. But:
Dr. Solomon's Anti-Virus Toolkit for OS/2 - by Noah Sumner (1997)
If you are like the vast majority of OS/2 users you think you don't need an anti-virus program. We all know that DOS viruses can't affect OS/2, right? Wrong. The experts tell me that there are probably somewhere around 200 viruses that can and will affect you even if you are running OS/2 under HPFS. If you are running under FAT that number is much higher.
Well, at least none of them will really attack OS/2, right? Wrong again. There are currently three known viruses that are designed to attack OS/2 users only, and if Warp 4 is a success that number will start to rise.
Now you are probably saying, "Well, maybe I should protect myself from viruses." That is where our good friend from Dr. Solomon comes in to play. Why should you use Dr. Solomon's Anti-Virus for OS/2? Here are three good reasons:
it detects the OS/2 viruses (IBM's Anti-Virus doesn't)
it has a nice PM interface
it is truly 32 bit.
Thanks for the links to The Virus Encyclopedia and OS/2 e-Zine.
– Joel Reyes Noche
6 hours ago
add a comment |
The cited source from the question is the source for the English Wikipedia page as well, that claims that there are only very few known viruses for that system.
But the low amount of viruses seems to be much bigger.
Not two, but at least five viruses are well known. That's more than double.
Arelocs also known as Aep is one of a few viruses for IBM's OS/2 operating system. It is considered "the first known virus that affects OS/2 files in the 'right way'" as it writes itself to the file and modifies the NewEXE header and other system areas.
Type File virus
Creator Mark Ludwig
Date Discovered 1995
Place of Origin Show Low, Arizona, USA
Source Language
Platform OS/2
File Type(s) .dll, .exe
Jiskefet
Jiskefet is a rare example of an OS/2 virus. It was coded by Masud Khafir, who named it after a Dutch comedy troupe.
Type File virus
Creator Masud Khafir
Date Discovered 1994
Place of Origin The Netherlands
Source Language Assembly
Platform OS/2
File Type(s) .exe
Infection Length 2,048 bytes
Myname is an OS/2 virus. When executed, the virus infects OS/2 NewEXE files, overwriting them. While the virus has no malicious payload, the overwriting of the files damages them irreparably.
Type File virus
Creator
Date Discovered 1993.12
Place of Origin United States
Source Language
Platform OS/2
File Type(s) .exe
Infection Length 2,048 bytes
Rexx is a virus for OS/2. Very little information is available about the virus. Our tests seem to show it overwrites files it infects.
Rexx is also the name of a scripting language. It predates OS/2 appearing in 1979 and it was the primary scripting language for that OS, along with Amiga and a few others.
Type File virus
Creator
Date Discovered
Place of Origin
Source Language
Platform OS/2
File Type(s) .exe
Infection Length 38,620 bytes
Reported Costs
Uxia is an OS/2 virus. All that seems to be known about it any more is that it is 7,200 bytes long and for IBM's OS/2.
Type File virus
Creator
Date Discovered
Place of Origin
Source Language
Platform OS/2
Infection Length 7,200 bytes
Reported Costs
As we know there is something like
IBM AntiVirus Version 2.5 running on OS/2. Advertised as:
So, tell me how does it work really?
In a nutshell, pretty darn well. Over the years as a network administrator, I have taken a few viruses prisoner. Since I found these in "the wild" I used them for my "live" testing. The FORM virus is probably the most common boot sector virus in the wild.
But what is FORM? A DOS virus:
Form is a boot sector virus from the 1990's. It often topped charts for the most common virus. Form was extremely long-lived, on the list of viruses in the wild up until 2006, 16 years after its initial release.
Type Boot sector virus
Creator
Date Discovered 1990.02
Place of Origin Zurich, Switzerland
Source Language Assembly
Platform DOS
Infection Length 3 disk sectors
Reported Costs
That seems to narrow down the viruses truly and specifically targeting OS/2 only to be quite small. But:
Dr. Solomon's Anti-Virus Toolkit for OS/2 - by Noah Sumner (1997)
If you are like the vast majority of OS/2 users you think you don't need an anti-virus program. We all know that DOS viruses can't affect OS/2, right? Wrong. The experts tell me that there are probably somewhere around 200 viruses that can and will affect you even if you are running OS/2 under HPFS. If you are running under FAT that number is much higher.
Well, at least none of them will really attack OS/2, right? Wrong again. There are currently three known viruses that are designed to attack OS/2 users only, and if Warp 4 is a success that number will start to rise.
Now you are probably saying, "Well, maybe I should protect myself from viruses." That is where our good friend from Dr. Solomon comes in to play. Why should you use Dr. Solomon's Anti-Virus for OS/2? Here are three good reasons:
it detects the OS/2 viruses (IBM's Anti-Virus doesn't)
it has a nice PM interface
it is truly 32 bit.
The cited source from the question is the source for the English Wikipedia page as well, that claims that there are only very few known viruses for that system.
But the low amount of viruses seems to be much bigger.
Not two, but at least five viruses are well known. That's more than double.
Arelocs also known as Aep is one of a few viruses for IBM's OS/2 operating system. It is considered "the first known virus that affects OS/2 files in the 'right way'" as it writes itself to the file and modifies the NewEXE header and other system areas.
Type File virus
Creator Mark Ludwig
Date Discovered 1995
Place of Origin Show Low, Arizona, USA
Source Language
Platform OS/2
File Type(s) .dll, .exe
Jiskefet
Jiskefet is a rare example of an OS/2 virus. It was coded by Masud Khafir, who named it after a Dutch comedy troupe.
Type File virus
Creator Masud Khafir
Date Discovered 1994
Place of Origin The Netherlands
Source Language Assembly
Platform OS/2
File Type(s) .exe
Infection Length 2,048 bytes
Myname is an OS/2 virus. When executed, the virus infects OS/2 NewEXE files, overwriting them. While the virus has no malicious payload, the overwriting of the files damages them irreparably.
Type File virus
Creator
Date Discovered 1993.12
Place of Origin United States
Source Language
Platform OS/2
File Type(s) .exe
Infection Length 2,048 bytes
Rexx is a virus for OS/2. Very little information is available about the virus. Our tests seem to show it overwrites files it infects.
Rexx is also the name of a scripting language. It predates OS/2 appearing in 1979 and it was the primary scripting language for that OS, along with Amiga and a few others.
Type File virus
Creator
Date Discovered
Place of Origin
Source Language
Platform OS/2
File Type(s) .exe
Infection Length 38,620 bytes
Reported Costs
Uxia is an OS/2 virus. All that seems to be known about it any more is that it is 7,200 bytes long and for IBM's OS/2.
Type File virus
Creator
Date Discovered
Place of Origin
Source Language
Platform OS/2
Infection Length 7,200 bytes
Reported Costs
As we know there is something like
IBM AntiVirus Version 2.5 running on OS/2. Advertised as:
So, tell me how does it work really?
In a nutshell, pretty darn well. Over the years as a network administrator, I have taken a few viruses prisoner. Since I found these in "the wild" I used them for my "live" testing. The FORM virus is probably the most common boot sector virus in the wild.
But what is FORM? A DOS virus:
Form is a boot sector virus from the 1990's. It often topped charts for the most common virus. Form was extremely long-lived, on the list of viruses in the wild up until 2006, 16 years after its initial release.
Type Boot sector virus
Creator
Date Discovered 1990.02
Place of Origin Zurich, Switzerland
Source Language Assembly
Platform DOS
Infection Length 3 disk sectors
Reported Costs
That seems to narrow down the viruses truly and specifically targeting OS/2 only to be quite small. But:
Dr. Solomon's Anti-Virus Toolkit for OS/2 - by Noah Sumner (1997)
If you are like the vast majority of OS/2 users you think you don't need an anti-virus program. We all know that DOS viruses can't affect OS/2, right? Wrong. The experts tell me that there are probably somewhere around 200 viruses that can and will affect you even if you are running OS/2 under HPFS. If you are running under FAT that number is much higher.
Well, at least none of them will really attack OS/2, right? Wrong again. There are currently three known viruses that are designed to attack OS/2 users only, and if Warp 4 is a success that number will start to rise.
Now you are probably saying, "Well, maybe I should protect myself from viruses." That is where our good friend from Dr. Solomon comes in to play. Why should you use Dr. Solomon's Anti-Virus for OS/2? Here are three good reasons:
it detects the OS/2 viruses (IBM's Anti-Virus doesn't)
it has a nice PM interface
it is truly 32 bit.
edited 8 hours ago
manassehkatz
1,636216
1,636216
answered 10 hours ago
LangLangC
233128
233128
Thanks for the links to The Virus Encyclopedia and OS/2 e-Zine.
– Joel Reyes Noche
6 hours ago
add a comment |
Thanks for the links to The Virus Encyclopedia and OS/2 e-Zine.
– Joel Reyes Noche
6 hours ago
Thanks for the links to The Virus Encyclopedia and OS/2 e-Zine.
– Joel Reyes Noche
6 hours ago
Thanks for the links to The Virus Encyclopedia and OS/2 e-Zine.
– Joel Reyes Noche
6 hours ago
add a comment |
Joel Reyes Noche is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
Joel Reyes Noche is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
Joel Reyes Noche is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
Joel Reyes Noche is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
Thanks for contributing an answer to Retrocomputing Stack Exchange!
- Please be sure to answer the question. Provide details and share your research!
But avoid …
- Asking for help, clarification, or responding to other answers.
- Making statements based on opinion; back them up with references or personal experience.
To learn more, see our tips on writing great answers.
Some of your past answers have not been well-received, and you're in danger of being blocked from answering.
Please pay close attention to the following guidance:
- Please be sure to answer the question. Provide details and share your research!
But avoid …
- Asking for help, clarification, or responding to other answers.
- Making statements based on opinion; back them up with references or personal experience.
To learn more, see our tips on writing great answers.
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function () {
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
});
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
StackExchange.ready(
function () {
StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fretrocomputing.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f8581%2fhow-many-os-2-viruses-were-there%23new-answer', 'question_page');
}
);
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function () {
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
});
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function () {
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
});
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function () {
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
});
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
3
"Is there any reference that states" saves this from being a list question. Well-written, and probably a good question for this site!
– wizzwizz4♦
13 hours ago
1
The anti-virus programs for OS/2 seem to have been intended for use on OS/2 servers which provided services to DOS or Windows machines. Catching viruses before they were served would have been valuable.
– John Dallman
11 hours ago