From: "Packard" Newsgroups: comp.os.msdos.djgpp Subject: Re: Quake.exe: not COFF Date: Wed, 26 Nov 1997 20:15:17 -0500 Organization: JagUndi Lines: 36 Message-ID: <65ihga$885$1@dagobah.blueriver.net> References: <199711260437 DOT XAA11974 AT delorie DOT com> <347c20d4 DOT 422806573 AT news-direct> NNTP-Posting-Host: pm3-1-24.blueriver.net To: djgpp AT delorie DOT com DJ-Gateway: from newsgroup comp.os.msdos.djgpp Precedence: bulk Look, it was an educated guess okay? I mean, IE4 will turn a directory name, (a certain type of server, and if the path on that server is more than 255 characters.) into a virus on the fly. They've got a bug fix for it! So, if text could, why not binary fragments? Packard Ed Avis wrote in message <347c20d4 DOT 422806573 AT news-direct>... >On Wed, 26 Nov 1997 04:42:47 GMT, "sl" wrote: > >>On Tue, 25 Nov 1997 20:26:50 -0500, Packard wrote: >> >>>Indeed, turning off a Win95 machine, without shutting down completely can >>>leave file fragments (run scandisk through DOS mode) and they may/may not >>>turn into viruses. >> >> Win95 does it again.. Look, file fragements simply CANNOT spontaneously turn into viruses.. Where >>do you people come up with all this? > >You never know... it might happen... > >Suppose the fragment was part of the file writing code and due to disk >corruption it got attached to the start of another executable. There >is a miniscule chance that the fragment of machine code would work and >copy itself to the start of another file; and over millions of years >of PC usage, it might evolve into a highly intelligent lifeform. 8-> > >It is thought that biological viruses started this way, as "fragments" >of DNA which got lost and by fluke had the ability to reproduce >themselves. > >-- >Ed Avis