enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Rensenware - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rensenware

    Rensenware is unusual as an example of ransomware in that it does not request the user pay the creator of the virus to decrypt their files, instead requiring the user to achieve a required number of points in the shoot 'em up video game Undefined Fantastic Object before any decryption can take place.

  3. Bad Day (viral video) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bad_Day_(viral_video)

    Bad Day (also known as Badday, Computer rage or Office rage) is a 27-second viral video released in 1996, where a frustrated office worker assaults his cubicle computer. It has circulated virally online since 1997. The video became a cultural embodiment of computer rage, and is the subject of several parodies and ad campaigns.

  4. OneDrive - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/OneDrive

    Microsoft OneDrive is a file-hosting service operated by Microsoft. First released as SkyDrive in August 2007, it allows registered users to store, share, back-up and synchronize their files. OneDrive also works as the storage backend of the web version of Microsoft 365.

  5. ‘I’m feeling gaslit by my own computer’: Why a small change ...

    www.aol.com/why-small-change-microsoft-big...

    “I was like, ‘Wow, I’m feeling gaslit by my own computer,’” Luthin says. “It happened out of nowhere. None of us really knew it was going to happen.

  6. Sobig - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sobig

    The Sobig viruses infected a host computer by way of the above-mentioned attachment. When this is started they will replicate by using their own SMTP agent engine. E-mail addresses that will be targeted by the virus are gathered from files on the host computer. The file extensions that will be searched for e-mail addresses are: .dbx.eml.hlp.htm ...

  7. MEMZ - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MEMZ

    Others include randomly moving the cursor slightly; opening up satirical Google searches under Google.co.ck, such as "how to remove a virus" and "how to get money" on the user's web browser; reversing text; and opening various random Microsoft Windows programs, such as the calculator or command prompt.

  8. Mydoom - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mydoom

    Mydoom was named by Craig Schmugar, an employee of computer security firm McAfee and one of the earliest discoverers of the worm. Schmugar chose the name after noticing the text "mydom" within a line of the program's code. He noted: "It was evident early on that this would be very big. I thought having 'doom' in the name would be appropriate." [4]

  9. jdbgmgr.exe virus hoax - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jdbgmgr.exe_virus_hoax

    The jdbgmgr.exe virus hoax involved an e-mail spam in 2002 that advised computer users to delete a file named jdbgmgr.exe because it was a computer virus. jdbgmgr.exe, which had a little teddy bear like icon (The Microsoft Bear), was actually a valid Microsoft Windows file, the Debugger Registrar for Java (also known as Java Debug Manager, hence jdbgmgr).

  1. Related searches onedrive folder showing twice as big as hell on computer virus meme

    ntfs onedrive erroronedrive wikipedia
    microsoft one drive wikintfs onedrive
    microsoft one drive