No. There are several different ways you can consider the strength of Computer Viruses, and Melissa was not the strongest on any of those scales. For example, there are a number of variants of Nimda that were harder to clean out than Melissa, and there are a number now that are significantly harder to clean out than Nimda; and SQL Slammer, while simple enough to clean, spread amazingly rapidly.
The Melissa virus is a mass-mailing macro virus. It can effect email that is sent and infect the computer when the email is opened.
The Melissa virus was named after a Miami stripper that the virus creator, David L. Smith of Aberdeen Township, New Jersey met.
The Melissa virus was released by David Smith. The virus was spread in 1999 and as a result David Smith was sentenced to 10 years in prison.
The Melissa virus was released by David Smith. The virus was spread in 1999 and as a result David Smith was sentenced to 10 years in prison.
it is not a virus but a worm, if you have the proper anti virus software, you will be just fine!!! sexysk8trgirl on Quizilla
David L. Smith
It was a man named David L. Smith who created and released the Melissa computer virus. He was subsequently arrested and sentenced to prison.
The Melissa virus is a mass-mailing macro virus. It has many behaviors similar to a worm, but is not a stand alone program so cannot be categorized as such. The virus infects Microsoft Word documents and mailed copies of infected files through Microsoft Outlook.
David L. Smith
Dr carmet in the north west
1999
Two brothers Basit Ali and Amjad Ali