Sim Plague 141
Brian Kingsbury writes: "The New York Times has an
article on a new twist in the world of the Sims --- a "virus" that
can kill off a player's characters. In a particularly sadistic twist,
the virus is carried by a guinea pig that players download from the
Sims Web site. I wonder what's next, maybe the Black Death?
" That's all Nate would have needed to complete his House of Fear - locked doors, no food, two ghosts, and the kitchen on fire. Will Wright, you're a genius.
Re:If I had The Sims... (Score:1)
If I had the sim progamming language, I'd design an RMS sim that would go around yelling GNU/Linux, GNU/Linux.
Then I'd build a cluster of bloodthirsty monsters, and call them Grendels.
/. inspired Sim site (Score:1)
Re:Um... this is a computer virus? (Score:1)
--synaptik
If you want to flame me, do so here [slashdot.org].
Re:Um... this is a computer virus? (Score:1)
--synaptik
If you want to flame me, do so here [slashdot.org].
It's only a matter of time.. (Score:1)
Actually, I was looking for something to do tonight....hmm.
(evil snicker)
Re:About time (Score:1)
Yes, I've researched this a bit.
Re:Take another look at *the* picture (Score:1)
Because there's no evidence to that. But that the relatives were kidnappers is quite clear; thanks to the media the entire nation witnessed it.
I can't believe so many people are defending a gross abuse of power, committed with a neglect of the courts.
While I do agree that they did go a bit extreme, I'm not sure this was an abuse of power. The child was, for all intents and purposes, kidnapped. He was being held hostage, and negotiations were not working. Was sending in armed agents a bad thing? Yes. But did they have any other choice? I'm not so sure they did. And when you run out of options, you do what you have to do.
I'm not surprised that Reno ordered it, though, as she has a long history of such acts.
Agreed. But for once I think she may well have been right. In the past she's been more than a little trigger-happy, and many people died senselessly as a result. But this time she showed a great deal of restraint, actually waiting until there was no other option.
Going into a house, in the way those agents did, was just asking for somebody to be killed.
Quite true. But no one was killed; that is what's important. Going into a building with guns to rescue hostages is also just asking for someone to be killed, and that's more or less what this was. The relatives managed to pull a rather inane political-ideology bit to manipulate a lot of people and hide the truth of their actions, but they did what they did.
If people suddenly find that agents have broken into a house, and are pointing automatic weapons at them, people will often react defensively.
They'll react defensively if anyone breaks into a house with automatic weapons. They'll also react defensively if their children have been kidnapped.
We *do* still have a right to keep arms in our house, and bear them to defend ourselves.
Yes, that's true. From all reports, there were guns in the house; that is why the agents were sent in armed. It would have been stupid to send in unarmed agents which could have been mowed down in front of the child, making this even more of a tragedy than it would have been.
If the agents had a warrant, and it very much looks like they did, then they did nothing wrong. If they didn't have one that's another matter, but the vast majority of reports seems to show that they had one. Displays of force are Bad Things, and should only be used in very rare cases when there is no other option. However, this seems to have been exactly such a case.
Re:Buffy Plug-in? (Score:1)
Ah, Yohko-chan...
Re:About time (Score:1)
>and burn em at the stakes.
We'd need the "sim-scales" patch too. And a duck.
Re:Playing God, or the devil? (Score:1)
Take another look at *the* picture (Score:1)
Looks different now, doesn't it?
Re:Playing God, or the devil? (Score:1)
It's kind of scary how much this does to explain all the suffering in the world.
F-prot for sims? (Score:1)
Art imitates life... (Score:1)
Either that or an 3l33t h4x0r is building a virus to infect "The SIMS" plug-ins.
-
Re:Art imitates life... (Score:1)
The program is intended to be modifiable, and at some point Maxis, now a division of Electronic Arts, plans to make the language it has created, known as Edith, available to the players. Edith is designed to permit anyone with minimal programming skills to extend the game.
Mr. Wright said he realized that such a language in the hands of antisocial game players would create vexing problems. "Hopefully," he said, "they will be balanced by people doing more creative things."
Actually the Edith programming language concept is really a fun little idea from wright. I'm impressed with the implications. A very simple language to extend play within the game... I'm reading between the lines but I think this is intended to be a kind of interpereted language. If it is a "real" programming language with sufficient facilities it would really boot strap a lot of kids into the world of programming.
I like it, it means that there'll be a whole lotta codin' going on. I can see it now... billy's 'The Sims v2.0' plug-in that allows your character to carry a BFG or a HyperGun and blast his enemies!
Ofcourse there are other implications... but those aren't as much fun as crazy coders building insane extentions to muck up a paradise world. so... I still get to laugh manically...
Bwaaa haaa haaa!
-
Re:Virus to deter piracy? (Score:1)
Um, the origional SimCity (now SimCity Classic) did this ten years ago. It had a "cheatsheet" that you had to enter the correct code from when you started the game (remember those?). If you didn't have the code or entered it incorrectly (you had two or three tries), after a few years of building up your city the disasters would start (yes, even if disasters were turned off) and continue non-stop, completely leveling your city.
I had some friends that pirated a copy, but didn't bother to patch over the protection or get a copy of the cheatsheet because they actually enjoyed that "feature". Don't ask, I don't understand either.
-"Zow"
Registration required at nytimes.com.. (Score:1)
I like it! (Score:1)
Heh. Just a matter of time.... >:)
Re:The End did not justify the Means (Score:1)
The picture also illustrates that the safety is engaged on the weapon, though you can't always see that in the resolution-crippled versions that you see in the newspaper. Also realize that we're only dealing with a moment in time... accounts from witnesses at the scene (including the AP photographer who is, incidentally, guaranteed to win a pulitzer, ) state that the agent immediately raised the barrel of his weapon upon seeing the fisherman and the child inside the closet and confirming that there was no threat.
Events didn't quite go off the way I would have planned them, but the end result was acceptable... zero injuries and mission accomplished.
Re:Um... this is a computer virus? (Score:1)
To put it in terms journalists might understand:
I have a picture of my dog stored on my computer. I hope he doesn't get loose and eat my homework.
--
uh oh. (Score:1)
My first traumatic Sim Death was when I discovered a burnt out light bulb and had one of my favorite sims change it - only she had just taken a bath. Keeled over dead straight away. That really sucked. Fun game though.
-lx
Re:Take another look at *the* picture (Score:1)
I can't believe so many people are defending a gross abuse of power, committed with a neglect of the courts.
I'm not surprised that Reno ordered it, though, as she has a long history of such acts.
Going into a house, in the way those agents did, was just asking for somebody to be killed. If people suddenly find that agents have broken into a house, and are pointing automatic weapons at them, people will often react defensively.
We *do* still have a right to keep arms in our house, and bear them to defend ourselves.
Re:John Markoff is at it again... (Score:1)
When the articles are filled with lies and misrepresentations, that's a serious issue, regardless of WHOM is being written about. I'm not condining what Kevin did, but that's no excuse to blow things out of propotion and print outright falsehoods, then have the gall to call it "journalism".
The 'withered penis' virus of 1991 (Score:1)
It spread the same way; if you looked at an infected person, you got infected as well. However, its only effect was that it changed an attribute named 'appendage' that some code used so that your default appendage was: a withered penis. Hence messages like this became common:
A withered penis appears and pulls (person) up and over the edge of the floating island.
Re:Arrrgh! (Score:1)
I thought the article was really good up to that point as well. Kudos to Will Wright! This was a truly geek move and deliciously evil to put a cute pet on the Maxis homepage that could lead to such havoc. By virtue of making a way to play through the virus and save the character, he's done it in just the right way, without affecting game balance.
At first I was a little mortified at the thought of some kid innocently wanting a pet in the game then having their character get messed up, but then I realized this even has educational value. That little kid will understand that pets need to be taken care of, their cages cleaned, and that human hygiene when sick is important to prevent the spread of disease. Too bad my coworkers didn't learn about washing themselves as kids...
-m
Re:Edith (Score:1)
About time (Score:1)
I've only tried the game once or twice, but after only 30 minuttes of gameplay, I started looking for a way to kill of those annoying creatures.
Perhaps a full blown black death extension to the game, migh be good. Let's see what natural selection can do.
What about a dark ages patch. Go for a witch-hunt and burn em at the stakes.
Re:Arrrgh! (Score:1)
----
Dave
Purity Of Essence
Making more money. (Score:1)
Re:This may sound heretical... (Score:1)
The fact that you have to micromanage your people so much (making them run to the bathroom, for crying out loud, geez) also does not make the game appeal to me much....
--
Re:More Sims Mayhem - mirror? (Score:1)
I guess you just need to keep trying to reload the page.
--
Drop the Chalupa! (Score:1)
;-)
SimDot? (Score:1)
Thanks! (Score:1)
George
Coming out of the closet (Score:1)
"Janet Reno hasn't come out of the closet, so why should we?"
Re:Wright could be in trouble (Score:1)
In any case, I think the article itself was drug induced or something. What's up with it bringing up Internet worms in the context of a "virus" that's part of a game? Sheesh. Next, these journalists are going to start harping on the "Censorware" code that's in the game when it mosaics out the characters when they're naked or going to the bathroom... Sigh.
Re:Arrrgh! (Score:1)
In 1.1 it's been replaced with 'rosebud'. It's in the readme that comes with the patch
Re:Virus to deter piracy? (Score:1)
First name: NoneOfYour
Last name: FuckingBusiness
email: postmaster@riaa.org (or postmaster@whoever is making me register)
I usually enter the zip code and other demographic data correctly, though.
Re:[Slightly OT] Problems with the Sims? (Score:1)
The first things that you should consider to be at fault are memory, video RAM, and cache. They are a common source of problems that don't seem to have a cause. That's because they are so sensitive to electrostatic shock, that when they are put in, they could be damaged but still work. You can check those components by using hardware testing software. I must warn you that a memory test can take hours. If you have 128 MB, prepare to leave the machine on for over a day. Check out PCDiags [windsortech.com] (but that one costs money) or visit your hardware manufacturers page to get testing programs for each piece of hardware. If you don't know what hardware you have, use System Analyser [cs.com] to make a list.
After you have ruled those out, break down the system to the bare components that you need to run the game. Take out your sound card, modem, ethernet card, and disconnect all peripherials except mouse, keyboard, and monitor. Then play and see if it crashed. If it doesn't, then it was one of those components. Start putting them in one-by-one until the problem happens again, and you should know what is wrong.
I see this more and more in the future.. (Score:1)
Re:The End did not justify the Means (Score:1)
would you have allowed the family time to hide/hurt the child? would you have gently knocked on the door and asked: "may elian come out and come to daddy?"
the cuban american community seems more intent on defying castro than looking out for the real best interest of a child and his father. it is my feeling that elian is being exploited by the miami relatives who are in turn being exploited by the radical elements of the cuban american community.
come on, would his "mouthy" female cousin be a proper role model? she needs a lesson on the proper way to hold a conversation (one that does not involve screaming at the top of your lungs on all sorts of conjecture which seems to be the only way she holds a press conference).
that being said, i applauded the government's restraint in waiting and in using adequate force to confuse and deter resistance. you can argue 'what-ifs' all you want to avoid the real issue.
would the child be better off as poster child for the anti-castro movement?
Anime Plug-Ins? (Score:1)
Re:Don't know if anyone read the article .. (Score:1)
Re:Wright could be in trouble (Score:1)
It's not like it's eating your _Quicken_ database.
Re:Virus to deter piracy? (Score:1)
I always thought it was annoying, and, I did get download a crack for it not long after I bought it.
Re:Virus to deter piracy? (Score:1)
Re:Virus to deter piracy? (Score:1)
Of course, you could always unleash them on yourself for a little excitement too.
Re:Virus to deter piracy? (Score:1)
Re:Playing God, or the devil? (Score:1)
Re:Playing God, or the devil? (Score:1)
Playing God (Score:1)
Lesbian Sims (Score:1)
Honestly, when you add in the AdultPatch, who wouldn't want to have two naked male Sims making out on their computer...
(crickets chirping)
* Rumor has it that a programmer at Maxis was pissed about their failure to recognize alternative lifestyles, so he inserted a bit of code into one of the later pressings... come 2/14, male Sims would be dressed only in Speedos, and show "interest" in other male Sims.
Core Wars (Score:1)
And there have been other viruses in computer games. In 1984 a virus appeared in Core Wars, an early game in which users created programs that did battle in the memory of a computer
What excatly do they mean by this? When was there a 'Core War virus' except in the sense that some peoples 'bots replicated themselves?
Re:[Slightly OT] Problems with the Sims? (Score:1)
And it doesn't hurt to search their BBS...
Re:Um... this is a computer virus? (Score:1)
~=Keelor
Re:Harm to a person's financial well-being (Score:1)
Re:Arrrgh! (Score:1)
Offtopic rant:
I am sick and tired of all this "Hey moderators"
bull. Let whoever has mod points moderate already.
It seems in every article these days there are
a few posts saying "I can't believe this got a 2"
or "Mod this up" etc....leave it alone. I mean I
can understand posting a clarification when
something was intended as a joke and gets called
flamebait (has happend to me even) but...seriously
let them decide for themselves.
> I totally agree, even working in a media
> organisation I hate the way they've got to put a
> spin on these thin
Its not just these things, its everything. Face
it, scare tactics work. Repeat after me everyone:
"Readership is God.".
Why do you think media flocked to columbine like
flies to shit? Great opertunity to scare people
shitless, and keep the glued to the tube and
reading the paper. Anything they can do to latch
into peoples fear, they will do. If your afraid
that something might affect you, then you are
going to keep reading, keep watching, and keeping
their advertisers happy.
Re:Throwing Stones.... (Score:1)
about moderation? That was a discussion about
playboy magzine and, me, defending the stance
that its articles ARE actually good and worth
reading.
Perhaps in the subject line you say? well the
subject line began with a 3 letter sequence
"re:" before the "how did this get a 4" which
implies, nay, outright states, that it was a reply
to someone else.
(see above: "Re:Throwing Stones....")
Now, as the Mahareeshi Hashish Yogi said...
"People who live in glass houses, shouldn't throw
orgies"....thats words to live by homey.
-Steve
Ebola Virus For All (Score:1)
It fits in perfectly with our house that has the people locked up in the attic with no food, no bathroom, and no way out. We let them starve to death and call it a documentary.
--
Re:Virus to deter piracy? (Score:1)
Re:Wright could be in trouble (Score:1)
It's too bad that SimLife was already taken. They could have named the product that. SimLives for people w/o real lives.
real world atrocities (Score:1)
Re:Um... this is a computer virus? (Score:2)
Christopher A. Bohn
Re:Um... this is a computer virus? (Score:2)
Harm to a person's financial well-being (Score:2)
Wait 'til the multi-player version comes out, when people can exchange characters. I build up a great family, looking to sell it on eBay. Mr. Wright gets cute and throws in another virus. My family's wiped out, and I've got nobody left to sell on eBay. Time for my lawyers to have a little talk with Mr. Wright. You just wait. :)
Personally, I think the guinea pig thing is a great idea, and should just be seen as part of the game. Who's to say that there isn't someone going around to animal shelters injecting guinea pigs with nasty viruses? Sure it's far-fetched, but so is life -- how many people expected their Tylenol to be laced with cyanide back in the '80s?
Cheers,
ZicoKnows@hotmail.com
Re:Virus to deter piracy? (Score:2)
Sims meets Resident Evil (Score:2)
And they could still have babies, and baby zombies like Dead Alive. Ah, Peter Jackson...
Doh! Should have sued him a long time ago! (Score:2)
On a more serious note, I don't think it's "damage " when your game character dies. You might as well sue him for not making the Sim guy live forever.
Go get your free Palm V (25 referrals needed only!)
Re:Arrrgh! (Score:2)
You did see who wrote the article, right? That bufoon Markoff has made his living pulling crap like this. Besides, it's easier than doing any kind of research or something.
----
Dave
Purity Of Essence
Re:It's only a matter of time.. THE HORRIBLE TRUTH (Score:2)
simcastro! simcastro! simcastro!
Chso the Clockwork Maus
Throwing Stones.... (Score:2)
It's a bit hypocritical to bitch about something you yourself are guilty of, my homey.
http://slashdot.org/co mments.pl?sid=00/04/13/1939221&cid=152 [slashdot.org]
The Divine Creatrix in a Mortal Shell that stays Crunchy in Milk
Re:Sims meets Resident Evil (Score:2)
Or SimLepracy... I can see the digitized extremeties falling off now...
[Slightly OT] Problems with the Sims? (Score:2)
Does anyone else have problems running this game?
There's a page on the EA support website for my problem. "Sims crashed with a page fault in module " meaning, basically, I can run it for about five minutes, and then it crashes.
Their solutions are to kill all the other programs, and to make sure your drivers are up-to-date.
I've contacted EA support, and while they've suggested numerous solutions to the problem, none have worked.
Is anyone else getting this? I see good reviews and (mostly) positive comments on this game everywhere, but almost no mention of my problem.
If anyone had this problem, and has fixed it, I'd really appreciate hearing how!
Unauthorized virus hacks? (Score:2)
Re:Virus to deter piracy? (Score:2)
This sounds a little like the Intel PIII CPU ID, doesn't it?
I'm going to buy this game right now! (Score:2)
Don't know if anyone read the article .. (Score:2)
I guess I don't blame them for making the game for linux from the get go ... that would have taken production costs higher, but now that the game is going no where but up I don't thi8nk it would be so unlikely to make it for linux. I like Loki, but just because they make games for linux doesn't mean they're cheap ...
Now that's just twisted... (Score:2)
But truly, you would have to trust Maxis 100% with any bonus material they give you for the game... the next thing you know is that your nieghbours in the game open a crack house...
Re:Arrrgh! (Score:2)
Anomalous: inconsistent with or deviating from what is usual, normal, or expected
The story with no registration required (Score:2)
Edith (Score:2)
no need for me to worry (Score:3)
no censor "hack":
create a file
"\Sims\GameData\Skins\adult-censor.cmx"
in it put:
version 300
0
1
adult-censor
1
0
0
if you want the children naked (sicko!), its:
"\Sims\GameData\Skins\child-censor.cmx"
version 300
0
1
child-censor
1
0
0
This may sound heretical... (Score:3)
The (alleged) AI in this game seems no more advanced than some expert system based Starcraft clone. Was this just a testing ground for Maxis to play around with neural networks, and happened to become stable enough to release as a game? This game needs to go through a little more improvements to the neural network before it even comes close to what a real human would do.
That, plus the fact that the premise is so *dull*. Oh, joy. I get to simulate a person who gets a job as a medical test subject or a race track announcer. Yeehaw. Woohoo.
Oh, please. I'd much rather spend time blowing away enemy starfighters in X-Wing Alliance or giant robots in Mechwarrior 3 than guide a person around a house, doing chores in The Sims.
Just ranting. Flames are welcome.
Re:Arrrgh! (Score:3)
They're not implying that this well affect the entire Internet. What they're saying is that, were Sims a multiplayer game, the potential would exist for the virus (that kills characters in the game) to spread from character to character.
--
Ian Peters
Re:Arrrgh! (Score:3)
Clearly you know nothing about computers! Everyone knows this happened on X-files with that hot S&M digital chick with the sword.
Wright could be in trouble (Score:3)
Whoever knowingly causes the transmission of a program, information, code, or command, and as a result of such conduct, intentionally causes damage without authorization, to a protected computer;....incurs a penalty of: (c) (3)(A) a
fine under this title or imprisonment for not more than five years, or both, in the case of an offense...of this section which does not occur after a conviction for another offense under this section...and no more than ten years imprisonment if previously convicted,...or an attempt to commit an offense punishable under this subparagraph.
Intentionally causing damage without authorization sounds about right....
More Sims Mayhem (Score:3)
Someone with far too much time on his hands decided to see how badly he could break the game on ISCA BBS -- here's the results:
http://us4n6.dnaco.net/simz/ [dnaco.net]I particularly like the fireman watching people keel over dead in the street....
--
Re:Now we just need The Sims for linux... (Score:3)
LINUX IS VULNERABLE TO VIRUS
only to explain later in the body of the article that it was a virus that only characters in the SIM game were vulnerable to, and then only if you download the Guinea Pig patch.
Re:Virus to deter piracy? (Score:3)
That the 'ginea pig' virus made news is odd; they tell you point-blank that characters handling it might get sick. Maybe I came in late and they had added that after several complaints -- but I've been playing several weeks and always knew.
"The Sims" is incredibly addictive -- the ONLY reason I still have MicroDos on my system. The various add-ons they offer on their site, coupled with pre-made characters & houses from fan sites (one UK site features dead-on renditions of various celebrities) have cost me more sleep-time than I care to admit.
Re:More Sims Mayhem (Score:3)
~=Keelor
Re:Arrrgh! (Score:3)
Think about this for a second. Outside of the very recent past, people with diseases were locked away. Personal "rights" were stripped for the good of the whole. What will happen in the game when someone gets a character that is running around trying to kill everyone with disease.
It will be interesting to see if people are as forgiving in a game atmosphere (where it costs even less) to someone that has a disease. Will names of the diseased be posted. Flags put outside their houses? Neighbors take up collections to pay for the cure?
I look forward to the answer to these questions and more when people can behave however they want.
Re:Arrrgh! (Score:3)
It's already happened.
Back in 1991 or 1992, text-based MUCKs already had programming languages. One enterprising programmer wrote a virus that attached itself to a person's description.
Whenever someone would look at an infected person, they would also be infected.
I forget what the 'payoff' of the virus was, but the 'antivirus' command even now exists in places like Furrymuck. [furry.org]
stupid little creatures (Score:4)
you know, given that my sim just tends to pass out on the floor when he gets tired, i doubt he could be trusted to take care of another living creature. no wonder the hamster bites them and gives them diseases.
---
Virus to deter piracy? (Score:4)
I'm sure people won't like that and a patch would certainly be created in no time, and it could be a PR problem, but it's an idea.
Creator (Score:4)
In some aspect he also controls the people who play his game. He has the power to teach them, to change them, to manipulate them.
for this ultimate goal all means are justified.
hale
Media Sensationalism and Reader Rabbit (Score:4)
"Right now it would be hard to convince a prosecutor to attempt to convict someone for such a program, but that may change," said Mark Rasch, a former assistant United States attorney who successfully prosecuted a Cornell graduate student for releasing the first Internet worm in 1989. "These things become more important as online gaming proliferates. With online gambling it will become even more problematic."
WTF??? I read about this Guinea Pig mod to this game two months ago in Computer Gaming World, and I thought, "No way! That is so cool!" All it did was prove to me that this thing really simulated real life, and was versitile enough that they could release such a hugely new feature into the game months after its release. It almost made me go out and buy it then and there.
It's a fscking game! The point of a game is for it to be difficult! If Sims players are so upset that they would, as this litigous Mark Rasch put it, attempt to CONVICT the programmer, then perhaps they should move to more easy to play games, like Reader Rabbit. That way, they'd always win.
To me, this is adding value to the product. For the same low price of $50 (or whatever it is), you get a game that is always changing, always becoming more challenging. Sounds to me like you're not likely to get bored of The Sims within the first two weeks of game play, like so many other games I've played. Again, if people want an easy game where they always win, then leave the computer alone and watch sitcoms.
I don't see where they get off saying "gamers may have been forced to confront the same challenges that face e-mail users whose computers are frequently attacked by hostile programs." What??? I don't see where anyone's hard drives have been deleted. I don't see where anyone's been forced. Sim players choose to download mods. Worm recipients don't choose to receive worms. And even then he's sensational about it. I'm an e-mail user, and I'm not frequently attacked by hostile programs. I've gotten maybe 3 infected emails in my entire life, and even then, was not stupid enough to open "prettypark.exe".
To me, this article didn't get bad in the middle, like a lot of you said. This article was doomsday from the very beginning. There was a lot of negative and dark language from the headline to the last sentance with only a few minor positive highlights.
Incidentally, the virus he refers to in Snowcrash only worked on hackers, so you'd think the media would like that... Get rid of the hackers, and all your problems will be solved.
John Markoff is at it again... (Score:5)
Well, if you look at the author of the article, it's none other than John Markoff! If the name doesn't ring a bell, he's the same guy who wrote sensational articles about Kevin Mitnick many years ago which ultimately resulted in Kevin getting treated so badly by "the system". You can read more at http://www.freekevin.com/ [freekevin.com].
Markoff wouldn't know good journalism if it bit him on the ass. Why the New York Times continues to employ someone as irresponsible as him is beyond me.
Arrrgh! (Score:5)
From the article:
Although there is no easy possibility that the guinea pig virus will escape from Sims and cause havoc in the Internet world, the specter of software viruses in the future of computer gaming is real, Mr. Smith said. "When they introduce a future multiplayer version of Sims, it will create an interesting social dynamic," he said.
Why can't they just tell the story, and not try to inflame the public with these false potentialities? JESUS. The article was great right up until this point. One of the (many) things that I loathe about the media is how they have this uncontrollable desire to make issues appear as nasty and brutish as possible. This is a perfect example. Virus in a computer game? We must surreptitiously imply that it might affect the entire Internet! That's MUCH more interesting!
FUCK THAT. Just tell the story! Grrrr....
-Rev.The real story of Quicksilver (Score:5)
Another thing the virus did was overlay each person's ability to communicate. The virus had its own special versions of the basic "say", "pose", "spoof", "write", and "whisper". (It could only create these through a big in the MUCK code on Furry, I'll note.) The payoff of the command was that after midnight (ie. one New Years), all infected users would have their communications silenced and rerouted to a special log file. Actually, the messages got printed out to the user's screen so that it _looked_ like everyone could hear them, but in fact they couldn't.
This "fun" went on for a good half hour until one of the administrators figured out what was going on because of a bug in the modified page program. (Note to coders: *always* test your code before you install it in public.) Eventually they just reinstalled an older DB to clean out the virus.
Incidently, they people perpetrating this took the log file, flamed it, and then posted it to usenet. In retrospect, that was a bad idea, but you do stupid stuff when you're 15...
If you're curious about the aftermath, a lot of clueless users on Furry complained to the programmer's sysadmin. Of course, the clueless users blew everything out of proportion, not understanding what really went on. When word finally got back to the programmer, apparently he had written an "internet worm, capable of copying itself between different servers on the internet." I only wish I was that good of a coder! Apparently the FBI got involved for a short time, until they realized that the Furry server was located in Canada, so any felonous charges would have to be tried in an international court. Once the feds finally realized it was just some stupid prank with no lasting harm, the programmer never heard a thing from them again.
Anyway, the guy lost his internet access, which was through a university. He spent the 9 months of downtime (before getting another account) working on a program to let people play several variants of Poker on MUCKs. Ironally, this program is still popular on Furry to this day. Consider it one last bit of both apology and spite.
But that was a long time ago, and I was a different person then.
-Ted
Um... this is a computer virus? (Score:5)
~=Keelor