
OU psychology senior Sidney Smith caught a very contagious virus last semester while at school. She said she felt sick to her stomach and got a worrisome headache. Smith’s symptoms were not caused by an illness, but out of worry for her crashed computer, which caught a dangerous virus when she downloaded some music from the Internet.
“My whole life was on that computer,” Smith said. “School papers, music, pictures, everything.”
Smith took her computer to OU’s resident technology experts, IT, who determined her hard drive was fried and must be replaced.
“Everything was gone,” Smith said. “I had almost 3,000 songs on my iTunes.”
Smith said she didn’t know what kind of virus her Dell laptop caught, but it didn’t really matter. OU students’ computers are prone to Internet viruses and worms if they are not protected by a security program. Smith is one of many students that have seen their computers fall victim to a hacker’s virus. IT’s creative ambassador Nick Key said he sees more than 100 infected computers parade through his office each semester.
“There’s so many different ways to get a virus,” Key said.
IT stays diligent to keep OU students informed about new ways to keep their computers safe from spam, viruses, and worms. When Microsoft released a new security patch for Windows users last Thursday, IT passed along the message to students the following day with instructions on how to download the update. Key said the patch fixes the program’s vulnerability to be susceptible for hackers to find and change information on personal computers.
“The vulnerability was spread out over so many computers that there was a potential for somebody to develop a worm that could go out and really affect a whole group of people,” Key said.
A worm is a computer program that replicates itself and then uses the infected computer’s network to send copies of itself to the most amount of people possible. Key said worms can use somebody’s address book or email contacts to send itself under a friendly guise.
“The idea is that it’s going out and trying to attach itself to as many computers as possible,” Key said.
Key said viruses are less common in Macs because a minority of people use them compared to PCs, and hackers are trying to target as many people as possible to spread their virus, worm, or trojan.
“Macs are definitely less susceptible to viruses,” Key said.
The IT store offers a free download of Symantec anti-virus software for PCs and Macs. Key said he uses Symantec on his own personal computer and has never had any virus or spam problems.
“When a virus tries to attack your computer, if you click delete it gets knocked off your computer before it even gets access to your files.” Key said.
Smith said she has learned from her mistakes and will try to be more cautious of what she downloads in the future.
“I’ve got an anti-virus program on it now,” Smith said. “I’m not taking any more chances.”
Key suggested that students update their systems regularly and install an anti-virus program to keep their computers protected.
Links:
Click here to download Symantec security software for free
Click here to update your Microsoft computer with the latest security patch
Click here to listen to IT Spokesperson Nick Key talk about how to keep your computer protected.
Simple tips to keep your computer from catching a cold… or virus this season.
- Regularly update your computer.
- Download and install an anti-virus program.
- Keep your computer locked when you’re away from your desk.
- Don’t download software from sites you don’t know.
- Look for sites with “https” in their address. This means they feature a secure connection.
- Never click on a link or open an attachment in a suspicious email.





