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October 31st, 2003, 11:25 AM
#21
What the hell are you talking about? Just the fact that they can mail themselves then trick dumb idiots into downloading them or the fact that they can drop mirc and pirch scripts then interact with users VIA: IRC and trick them into downloading could possably be considered some small form of "AI" simply because of the interaction between worms & users.
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October 31st, 2003, 12:13 PM
#22
Originally posted here by MsMittens
And pretty much you can't prevent worm propogation without having appropriate A/V or other methods of removing the worm. To this day, I still receive Code Red worm activity nofication on my IDS.
Not entirely true. You can easily prevent infection by a worm or virus if you can take away its infection vector.
For example if you remove the .ida script mapping in IIS you remove the infection vector for Code Red thereby preventing infection (of Code Red) without the need for patching and/or AV.
But you would really need to know what you are doing!
Oliver's Law:
Experience is something you don't get until just after you need it.
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October 31st, 2003, 03:32 PM
#23
What the hell are you talking about? Just the fact that they can mail themselves then trick dumb idiots into downloading them or the fact that they can drop mirc and pirch scripts then interact with users VIA: IRC and trick them into downloading could possably be considered some small form of "AI" simply because of the interaction between worms & users.
I mean actual AI. It thinks or rather replicates "thinking". Not only self updating, but self aware. It realizes what it is which makes it better able to do what it's supposed to (not that it's a good thing). It'd be pretty wierd/scary to have a self aware virus.
-Sam-
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October 31st, 2003, 04:55 PM
#24
I replicate therefor I am
Oliver's Law:
Experience is something you don't get until just after you need it.
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October 31st, 2003, 05:44 PM
#25
Junior Member
Where I can find some e-books about ASM with examples. I want to take some look at this.
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October 31st, 2003, 07:03 PM
#26
ASM calls depend on the OS and I think motherboard/processor. Google for ASM tutorials. Although most of the calls are processor independant some are, or some calls are handled differently I think.
-Sam-
Code:
mv b, 5
mv a, 5
cp a, b
jp nno
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November 3rd, 2003, 01:48 PM
#27
Originally posted here by PM8228
ASM calls depend on the OS and I think motherboard/processor. Google for ASM tutorials. Although most of the calls are processor independant some are, or some calls are handled differently I think.
Assembly is processor architecture dependant (i386/680x0/PPC). If you want to use systemcalls for printing to a screen i.e. these are OS dependant (Mac OS/Windows/Linux/*BSD).
Oliver's Law:
Experience is something you don't get until just after you need it.
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November 3rd, 2003, 03:40 PM
#28
Thanks for clearing that up SirDice.
-Sam-
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November 4th, 2003, 07:00 AM
#29
Junior Member
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