Cookie Monster (computer program)
Cookie Monster was a program created sometime before 1970 for several computer operating systems. The program was named after an obnoxious cartoon bear advertising cereal, but later became associated with the Muppet Cookie Monster. It started out as a way for computer users at Brown University to annoy their fellow students by manually sending messages blocking computer processes and demanding cookies. Only when the user of the ransomed computer typed “cookie” would they be able to go about their business as normal. Though it is often called a virus, it does not self-replicate and spread, and so is considered a proto-virus, or simply malware instead.[1] It is unrelated to the HTTP cookie.
When C.D. Tavres heard the idea at MIT, he decided to automate it. Since then, the program has been shared on different operating systems.[2]
The automated program ran on PDP series minicomputers[3] and was later replicated for Atari in two strains, called Cookie Monster Virus A and B. The only difference is that Virus B can survive a system reset if the system is not completely powered down.[4] It has the same function as the original program, but this time pops up automatically in regular intervals, and sometimes appears ever more frequent as the program is “fed” more cookies. In order to remove the program completely, the user must type in “Oreo”.[5]
The program inspired the movie Hackers (film) to include a fictitious “Cookie Monster Virus” that “ate” the system data of a Gibson supercomputer. It was stopped (presumably only temporarily) when the system administrator typed “cookie”.
References
- ^ Wentworth, Rob. "Computer Virus!". The Digital Viking. Twin Cities PC User Group. Retrieved 1 March 2012.
- ^ Tavres, C.D. "Origin of the Cookie Monster". Multics. multicians.org. Retrieved 1 March 2012.
- ^ Wentworth, Rob. "Computer Virus!". The Digital Viking. Twin Cities PC User Group. Retrieved 1 March 2012.
- ^ "The Known Viruses On Atari And Their Symptoms". Listing AVK. atari-forum.com. Retrieved 1 March 2012.
- ^ Posey, Talainia. "When viruses attack". techrepublic.org. Tech Republic. Retrieved 1 March 2012.
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