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Q. Is it possible to get a computer
virus just by reading a "regular" e-mail or is it necessary to download a
file in order to get one?
A. You can absolutely get a virus from opening just a "regular" e-mail--if your mail reader supports attachments.
Attachments are an extension to old-fashioned
plain-text e-mail. The idea is to allow all sorts of files to be
transferred without going through the hassle of downloading them
separately. In the bad old (or good old) days, computer users had to
send "pointers" to things. For example, you might tell somebody to look
at a certain Web page to see a funny picture. Attachments save us from
that nuisance.
If your mail reader supports attachments, the
downloading is done automatically. Depending on your reader and your
preferences, you
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may have to explicitly ask that an
attachment be decoded and opened; this method is inconvenient but safer.
Some mail readers will decode and even execute attached files as soon
as you open the message, or even when you simply list the messages that
are in your inbox. Microsoft Outlook is notorious for this kind of
behavior. If the message is malicious, you will find your computer
infected by a virus.
You can reduce the chance of this happening by
setting your mail reader so that it never opens attachments
automatically, and by never opening an attachment that you weren't
expecting to get. Nowadays, it isn't even safe to open attachments from
your best friend, because some viruses masquerade as people you know.
You might think you are going to see Fred's pictures of his party, and
actually wind up infecting your computer.
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