it slows it down
Virus can be a small program that alters or creates a process which system can badly damage by means of altering or deleting.
the ovre write virus is the virus that affects computer like
a computer virus
Viruses cannot directly affect your monitor, they can at most change image appearing on computer screen, and there are tons of viruses, so I can't tell you. Get an antivirus or a virus-proof system like Linux Mint.
No it cannot because a virus affects the process of a computer. if the computer is off there are no processes. but the computer will still have a virus.... use anti- virus programs to be rid of it.
An overwrite virus is a type of virus that replaces or overwrites data on a computer system with its own malicious code, rendering the original data unusable. These viruses can cause data loss or corruption, and are designed to hide their presence and avoid detection by antivirus programs.
Generally called a virus, but there are many types. The most destructive are root-kits. These will bury themselves into the programming of the Operating System and from there can affect any part of the system.
It affects the download speed of the internet if you are also scanning a anti virus to your computer.
Basically - No. A computer virus can possibly damage images you have downloaded to your computer, but not your camera. A virus does its business by running certain system commands in the operating system. The camera does not have the same type of operating system as a computer.
The differances are that a computer crime is like using LIMEWIRE or uTorrent and illegally downloading stuff and that is a crime and a virus is a program on a computer that affects the overall functions and files of a computer. but a person can commit a crime by illegally putting a virus on a computer
The virus can make a computer run slower than usual, or stop the computer from working.
Yes. However the AIDS computer virus is nothing like the Human AIDS virus. Your computer can not get the Human AIDS virus. This computer virus was written in 1990, and affected .com files running on the DOS system.