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Previously, they wrote viruses in assembler that weighed a couple of tens of kilobytes, contained disguise as a jeep (icon and info), opened access via FTP, scraped all the passwords on the computer - from ICQ to Outlook and IE, sent themselves to all contacts, etc. d.
And now newly-grown coolhackers write viruses weighing tens, if not hundreds of megabytes, on frameworks, and it happens that a virus asks to install the .Net Framework so that its majesty will start.
Under Linux, a virus can be written in the same way as under Windows. And a deer that has not installed an antivirus on Windows, and is susceptible to attacks, will enter the root password in linux in the same way to run the same virus, and no differentiation of rights will help it.
The only difference between viruses on Windows and on line is that you can use different holes, since they are different in different axes. In Windows, of course, there are more of them.
In any language. Even in Russian, for example: "Hello, I am a Moldovan virus. Due to the poverty of my creator and the general backwardness of the development of high technologies in our country, I am not able to cause any harm to your
computer. Please erase a few of the files you need most yourself, and then mail me to your friends.
Thank you for your understanding and cooperation."
On BrainFuck :)
For any.
Can.
JFYI: If you really want to, you can ... get really carried away :) Including with such schoolboy questions :)
There are no viruses on Linux. And if you still write, you need to write to Torvalts so that he releases a patch on the kernel so that the virus works
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