No. Computer Viruses use lines and strings of code.
YOU don't infect other computers with viruses.
DNA and RNA viruses.
Yes. Anything that isn't an organism will not contain DNA. For example, rocks do not have DNA. Additionally, some viruses have RNA instead of DNA although viruses would be covered by the first category mentioned.
You can get them in web pages, for example cookie viruses.
9 infected:10 computers
Blossom Damania has written: 'DNA tumor viruses' -- subject(s): Oncogenic DNA viruses, DNA Tumor Viruses, Tumor Virus Infections, Pathogenicity
Viruses destroy computers,BUT Anti-Viruses destroy viruses.
yes, but many viruses do not have DNA genome, but RNA genome.
On computers
Both viruses and bacteria contain genetic material in the form of DNA or RNA. Viruses can have either DNA or RNA as their genetic material, while bacteria typically have DNA as their genetic material.
Two types of viruses are DNA viruses, which have genetic material made of DNA, and RNA viruses, which have genetic material made of RNA. DNA viruses typically replicate in the host cell's nucleus, while RNA viruses typically replicate in the host cell's cytoplasm.
The ability of viruses to hide in the host's DNA. The fact that viruses can hide very well inside your dna.