Spyware/Related Articles: Difference between revisions
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imported>Howard C. Berkowitz (New page: {{subpages}} ==Parent topics== {{r|Information security}} {{r|Confidentiality||**}} {{r|Malware}} ==Subtopics== <!-- List topics here that are included by this topic. --> ==Other rel...) |
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{{r|Virus (computers)}} | {{r|Virus (computers)}} | ||
{{r|Worm (computers)}} | {{r|Worm (computers)}} | ||
==Articles related by keyphrases (Bot populated)== | |||
{{r|Destroyer}} | |||
{{r|DNA}} | |||
{{r|Content delivery and distributed file sharing networks}} | |||
{{r|Herodotus}} |
Latest revision as of 11:00, 21 October 2024
- See also changes related to Spyware, or pages that link to Spyware or to this page or whose text contains "Spyware".
Parent topics
- Information security [r]: The set of policies and protective measures used to ensure appropriate confidentiality, integrity and availability to information; usually assumed to be information in a computer or telecommunications network but the principles extend to people and the physical world [e]
- Confidentiality [r]: Assurance that information will not be disclosed to unauthorized parties [e]
- Malware [r]: A term created from the words "malicious" and "software", used to describe undesirable or harmful software and changes to a computer. [e]
Subtopics
- Virus (computers) [r]: A piece of malware that can exist only as part of another, authorized piece of software, which is an unauthorized consumer of resources on a computer; it may or may not propagate to other computers inside software sent to them [e]
- Worm (computers) [r]: A form of malware that can spread, among networked computers, without human interaction. [e]
- Destroyer [r]: Add brief definition or description
- DNA [r]: A macromolecule — chemically, a nucleic acid — that stores genetic information. [e]
- Content delivery and distributed file sharing networks [r]: Technologies, generally used on the public Internet, to improving the efficiency and convenience of distributing content of interest to multiple users [e]
- Herodotus [r]: (c. 484 BC - c. 430 BC) Greek historian, author of the Histories (historiai, 'inquiries'), called 'The Father of History,' as he was among the first to approach the reporting of history in a logical and skeptical way. [e]