Most people hear the word "malware" and think of one thing — a virus. But malware is an entire family of threats, and each type works completely differently. Knowing the difference isn't just trivia. It changes how you protect yourself.
Let's break it down simply.
Viruses attach themselves to legitimate files and spread when you share those files. They need your action to move. Worms, on the other hand, spread on their own — they exploit network vulnerabilities and can infect thousands of machines without anyone clicking anything.
Trojans are more deceptive. They disguise themselves as useful software — a free tool, a cracked app, a game mod — and once installed, they quietly open a backdoor for attackers to walk through. Ransomware, which has dominated headlines in recent years, encrypts your files and demands payment before you can access them again.
Spyware sits silently in the background, logging your keystrokes, capturing screenshots, and stealing passwords. You'd never know it was there. Adware is less sinister but deeply annoying — it hijacks your browser and bombards you with ads, often while sending your browsing behaviour to third-party advertisers.
Then there's rootkits — arguably the scariest category. They embed themselves so deep in your operating system that even your antivirus may not detect them. Removing a rootkit often means wiping the entire machine.
Understanding these categories helps you ask better questions: Is your antivirus actually catching rootkits? Does your backup survive ransomware? Are your free apps harvesting data?
🎬 I broke down every single malware type visually, with real examples, in this video: https://youtu.be/oOXC-1MhHjk
Each type has different attack vectors, different goals, and different defences. Once you understand the map, you stop treating all malware as the same thing — and you start making smarter decisions about your digital security.
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