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Worms do not require human assistance in order to spread. Viruses, backdoors, and rootkits all require some form of user assistance in order to propagate, most often by opening or executing an infected file.

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Which answer best identifies standalone software that does not require a user to assist in its propogation?

Which answer best identifies stand-alone software that does not require a user to assist in its propogation


Which answer best identifies standalone software that does not require a user to assist it in its propogation?

Which answer best identifies stand-alone software that does not require a user to assist in its propogation


Which answer best identifies stand alone software that does not require a user to assist in its propogation virus worm rootkit or backdoor?

worm


What identifies stand-alone software that does not require a user to assist in its' propogation?

a worm


What identifies stand alone software that does not require a user to assist in its propogation?

a worm


Identifies stand-alone software that does not require a user to assist in its propogation?

a worm


Best identifies stand-alone software that does not require a user to assist in its propogation?

a worm


What malware best identifies stand-alone software that does not require a user to assist in its propogation?

virus


Which answer best identifies stand-alone software that does not require a user to assist in its propogation a. Virus b. Worm c. Backdoor d. Rootkit?

The best answer is b. Worm. A worm is a type of malicious software that can replicate itself and spread to other computers without any user intervention, unlike a virus which often requires user action to propagate. Worms exploit vulnerabilities in networks to distribute themselves automatically.


Which answer best identifies stand alone software that does not require to user assist propogation?

a worm


What is usually included with standalone software and informs a user how the software can be used legally?

install cd


What is standalone software?

Standalone software is any software that can run alone, without the support of or needing to interact with other software. In the simplest case, software is either classified as standalone or part of a package of interacting software components. Examples in this case standalone software might be a simple text editor vs. a package of interacting software might be Microsoft Office (i.e. Word, Excel, PowerPoint, Outlook, Access, etc.) or a suite of tightly coupled distributed software running on different computers that interact over a network. Obviously in this case the standalone software is obviously still dependant on support from the operating system, installed I/O drivers, etc. for operation. In the extreme case, standalone software can run on a computer without an operating system. Diagnostic test software is frequently written as standalone software that runs without an operating system so that it has full control of the hardware being tested at all times. Between these cases there is a wide spectrum of things that can be called standalone software, depending on the degree of support needed from other software running on the computer.