ILOVEYOU: The Love Bug virus 20 years on – could it happen again? (2024)

Five years ago to the day, we wrote up our reminiscence of an infamous and globally troublesome computer pandemic from the turn of the century.
That makes the Love Bug computer virus 20 years old today, depending on your timezone and how early in the infection chain you were.
With apologies to The Beatles:

 It was 20 years ago today That the Love Bug virus came to play. It was written with a heap of guile And was guaranteed to kill your smile So may I introduce to you, The trick we've known for all these years, Files with two extensions at the end.

(We doubt this version is one you want to sing along to the Beatles’ tune, but if you aren’t familiar with the 1960s original, you can check out the album cover and listen to it online.)
The Love Bug virus was also known ILOVEYOU because it spewed itself out in emails with those three words, jammed together as one, in the subject line.
Intriguingly, the author mis-spelled the variable names mail and mailad (short for mail address) in the code as male and malead.
Whether that was simply a typo or a Freudian slip we shall probably never know:
ILOVEYOU: The Love Bug virus 20 years on – could it happen again? (1)
As shown above, the code used Visual Basic automation to get the Outlook program to do the email sending, retrieving every entry in your address book, both individuals and groups, and spamming out emails that looked like this:

  • Subject line: ILOVEYOU
  • Body text: kindly check the attached LOVELETTER coming from me
  • Attachment: LOVE-LETTER-FOR-YOU.TXT

Then, as today, Windows suppressed file extensions by default, so few users would have seen that the innocent-looking TXT file in fact ended in .vbs and was therefore a Visual Basic Script in disguise.
Worse still, back then Outlook would run attached scripts right way if you double-clicked on them, without warning you that you were actively launching a program that could take over your computer instead of passively opening a file to take a look at it.
The fact that the virus would only generate its deluge of infectious spam if you had the Outlook email client installed and configured correctly didn’t really hamper its spread much back then.
Webmail was in its infancy in 2000 and despite the popularity of Hotmail (which is now, of course, Outlook), many home users still used the Outlook program to send and receive mail via their ISP and very many companies used Outlook via a Microsoft Exchange server on their own network.
This really was one of history’s “fast burner” virus outbreaks.

ILOVEYOU also replicated itself across computers and networks, finding and infecting files including any existing Visual Basic files (.VBS and .VBE) as well as Javacript, various web-related files, JPEG images and MP3 files:
ILOVEYOU: The Love Bug virus 20 years on – could it happen again? (2)
Sadly for victims, infected files were blindy replaced with the Love Bug code, rather than being parasitically infected by having the virus inserted at the start.
In other words, the original content could not be extracted from infected files, so the after effects of a Love Bug attack were a bit like a ransomware attack today, but with no way to restore the originals except to reload a recent backup.
For reasons we can only imagine, infected MP3 files were marked hidden after infection, thus vanishing both literally by being overwitten and figuratively by dropping out of sight.
The virus also tried to spread via IRC, short for Internet Relay Chat, which was far and away the most popular instant messaging system back in 2000.

Whodunnit?

There were numerous hints in the code that implied it came from Manila in the Philippines, but given that all malware is, by definition, untrustworthy, text strings in the virus can’t blindly be believed:

rem barok -loveletter(vbe)rem by: spyder / [REDACTED]@mail.com / @GRAMMERSoft Group / Manila,Philippines

Barok, by the way, is a well-known comic book character in the Philippines; it’s also the name of a password-stealing Trojan that the Love Bug malware tried to download onto infected computers, using the curious but innocent-sounding name WIN-BUGSFIX.exe.
In this case, the malware author seemed to have been telling the truth about his whereabouts, because a suspect was soon identified: a college student in Manila by the name of Onel de Guzman.
He never finished his studies, bailing out of college after turning in a password stealing Trojan as an independent study project which he promoted as follows:
ILOVEYOU: The Love Bug virus 20 years on – could it happen again? (3)

The importance of this study is to help other people most especially Windows users. We all know that when we connect to the internet […] we spend a lots of money to pay the accounts for only using a couple of hours. So this program is the main solution, use it to steal and and retrieve Internet accounts of the victim’s computer.

His lecturer did not take kindly to this, commenting “this is illegal” and noting that “we do not produce BURGLARS.”

What happened next?

Apparently, de Guzman’s lecturer got one detail wrong in his reponse: de Guzman may have been a burglar as far as the spirit of the law was concerned…
…but when it came to the letter of the law, the police couldn’t find a way to charge him under what would now probably be anti-hacking regulations or computer misuse laws.
It seems that what he’d done wasn’t illegal on its own in the Philippines at the time – we’re assuming that prosecutors would have to have proved that he’d actually acquired passwords and abused them for financial gain, therefore establishing that he’d broken laws that didn’t relate only to what we now call cybercrime.
The Philippines legislature quickly moved to change that, presumably fearing that without more teeth in the legal code, malware disseminators could continue to shrug their shoulders and get off.
So de Guzman may have brought about a modernisation of cybercrime regulations in The Philippines, but he himself slipped the knot and got off scot free.

Where is he now?

Malware disseminators in other countries, including the UK and the US, had already been convicted by the year 2000, and had been (or soon would be) sent to prison.
So although de Guzman’s college career came to an early end, he wasn’t convicted of a crime and didn’t end up paying a fine or going to jail.
We’ve often wondered what became of de Guzman after the Love Bug outbreak, and now, thanks to a BBC reporter’s digging, published over the weekend, we’ve found out.
According to reporter Geoff White, de Guzman, now 44, runs a mobile phone kiosk in a Manila shopping mall where White tracked him down recently.
As White tells it:

[De Guzman] created a title for the email attachment that would have global appeal, tempting people across the world to open it.
“I figured out that many people want a boyfriend, they want each other, they want love, so I called it that,” [de Guzman] said.

How right he was.

What to do?

The good news is that a virus outbreak coded in the style of Love Bug probably wouldn’t get very far these days.
Firstly, Outlook and other mail client software is much more cautious about launching script files sent in as attachments, so crooks need to take extra steps to persuade you to run them.
Secondly, far fewer users have Outlook installed, so the trivial mass-mailing code shown above wouldn’t be as effective.
Thirdly, viruses like Love Bug spread in a complete and self-contained way so that once they reached a victim’s computer, they didn’t need always-on internet access to continue spreading.
They also typically spread with enormous aggression whenever they got the chance, assuming – as was the rule back in 2000 – that most users went online only intermittently.
As a result, even though they often caused short term “fast burning” global computer pandemics, they also become widely known quickly, could often be analysed with completeness and certainty once a sample was acquired, and attracted the sort of attention needed to get sysamins everywhere on the case rapidly.
That’s the good news.
The bad news, of course, is that today’s malware attacks don’t need to use Love Bug’s crude and aggressive spreading techniques – indeed, they don’t need to be attention-drawing worms or viruses at all.
So a Love Bug style attack is unlikely in 2020 not only because our defences have got stronger but also because the crooks have purposefully chosen to launch and sustain more subtle attacks that don’t set off the all alarm bells at once.
Oh, there’s more bad news.
Windows still doesn’t show you file extensions by default, so files called LOVE-LETTER-FOR-YOU.TXT could still be just about anything, from images and videos to documents, scripts and programs.
But you can fix that!
Type file explorer in the search bar and launch the Windows File Explorer app; go to the View menu and check the box labelled File Name Extensions.

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Insights, advice, suggestions, feedback and comments from experts

The Love Bug virus, also known as ILOVEYOU, was a computer virus that caused a global pandemic in the year 2000. It spread through emails with the subject line "ILOVEYOU" and an attachment named "LOVE-LETTER-FOR-YOU.TXT" [[1]]. The virus was written in Visual Basic Script (VBS) and disguised itself as a harmless TXT file by hiding the .vbs file extension [[1]]. When users opened the attachment, the virus would replicate itself and spread to other files on the computer, including Visual Basic files, JavaScript files, web-related files, JPEG images, and MP3 files [[1]].

The Love Bug virus took advantage of the fact that Windows at that time suppressed file extensions by default, so users were not able to see that the innocent-looking TXT file was actually a VBS script [[1]]. Furthermore, if users double-clicked on the attachment, the virus would run the attached script without warning, potentially taking over the computer [[1]].

The virus primarily spread through the Outlook email client, which was widely used by individuals and companies at the time [[1]]. Webmail services were still in their infancy, and many users relied on Outlook to send and receive emails [[1]]. Additionally, the virus attempted to spread through Internet Relay Chat (IRC), which was a popular instant messaging system in 2000 [[1]].

The Love Bug virus originated from the Philippines, as indicated by hints in the code [[1]]. The author of the virus was identified as Onel de Guzman, a college student in Manila [[1]]. De Guzman created the virus as an independent study project, promoting it as a way to steal and retrieve internet accounts [[1]]. Although his actions were considered illegal by his lecturer, de Guzman was not charged under specific anti-hacking or computer misuse laws at the time [[1]]. The incident prompted the Philippines legislature to update their cybercrime regulations [[1]].

As for the current whereabouts of Onel de Guzman, a BBC reporter recently discovered that he now runs a mobile phone kiosk in a Manila shopping mall [[1]]. De Guzman explained that he named the virus "ILOVEYOU" because he believed it would have global appeal and tempt people to open the attachment [[1]].

While a virus outbreak similar to the Love Bug is unlikely to be as successful today, it is important to note that modern malware attacks have become more sophisticated and subtle [[1]]. Email clients like Outlook have implemented stricter security measures to prevent the execution of malicious scripts [[1]]. However, it is still advisable to exercise caution when opening attachments and to keep antivirus software up to date [[1]]. Additionally, users can enable the display of file extensions in Windows File Explorer to help identify potentially harmful files [[1]].

Overall, the Love Bug virus was a significant event in the history of computer viruses, highlighting the need for improved cybersecurity measures and legislation to combat cybercrime.

ILOVEYOU: The Love Bug virus 20 years on – could it happen again? (2024)

FAQs

Does the ILOVEYOU virus still exist? ›

In total, it is estimated that the ILOVEYOU virus caused $15 billion in damages worldwide. Although the ILOVEYOU virus is no longer active, it serves as an example of how quickly malicious code can spread across the internet and cause widespread damage.

Is the Love Bug a virus True or false? ›

ILOVEYOU is also known as the "love letter virus" and the "love bug worm." Although commonly referred to as a computer virus, ILOVEYOU is actually a worm.

How was the ILOVEYOU virus triggered? ›

ILOVEYOU, sometimes referred to as the Love Bug or Loveletter, was a computer worm that infected over ten million Windows personal computers on and after May 5, 2000. It started spreading as an email message with the subject line "ILOVEYOU" and the attachment "LOVE-LETTER-FOR-YOU. TXT.

Where is the creator of the ILOVEYOU virus now? ›

The Philippines' National Bureau of Investigation tried to charge him with a number of different felony counts, but none were successful as the laws at the time hadn't been written to account for computer viruses. Today, de Guzman runs a small smartphone repair shop in a mall in Manila.

Does PC virus still exist? ›

It's clear computer viruses and other malware are not a thing of the past. Keep reading to learn more about what a computer virus is, why you should still be concerned about online security, and what antivirus programs are best for protecting your devices.

Is the virus message real? ›

If you don't have antivirus software on your computer, any virus alert you come across is fake. When you do have antivirus software, only trust alerts that appear in a window from your software. Pop-ups on web pages or in your browser are always fake.

Can a love bug bite you? ›

While not particularly harmful to humans directly (they neither bite nor sting), lovebugs are still a source of concern for some.

Is a love bug a kissing bug? ›

Lovebugs and other bibionid flies like this one commonly feed on nectar. While they may feed on any exposed part of the body, their preference is to feed on tender tissues on people's faces, especially around the lips, hence the name kissing bugs.

Is "I love you" a virus or worm? ›

The ILOVEYOU virus is a computer worm that spread through email attachments in 2000. The ILOVEYOU worm was written in Microsoft Visual Basic Script (VBS) and exploited the fact that the scripting engine system was enabled by default in Windows.

What is the Zeus virus? ›

Zeus is a Trojan horse malware package that runs on versions of Microsoft Windows. It is often used to steal banking information by man-in-the-browser keystroke logging and form grabbing. Zeus is spread mainly through drive-by downloads and phishing schemes.

What did the Pikachu virus do? ›

The body of the email contained an attached executable file, " PikachuPokemon.exe ", which installed a worm that attempted to delete two critical directories of the user's Microsoft Windows operating system. This would cause their computer to malfunction.

Who is the man behind the ILOVEYOU virus? ›

In May of 2000, a young hacker in the Philippines named Onel de Guzman created an email worm that would change the way the world thought about cybersecurity.

What is the Code Red virus? ›

Code Red was a computer worm observed on the Internet on July 15, 2001. It attacked computers running Microsoft's IIS web server. It was the first large-scale, mixed-threat attack to successfully target enterprise networks.

Who created spy eye virus? ›

Aleksandr Andreevich Panin

What was the scariest computer virus? ›

11 most dangerous computer viruses
  1. Mydoom. Considered by many to be the most dangerous computer virus in history, the Mydoom virus cost around $38 billion worth of damage in 2004. ...
  2. Sobig. The Sobig virus is a computer worm. ...
  3. Conficker. ...
  4. Klez. ...
  5. ILOVEYOU. ...
  6. WannaCry. ...
  7. Sasser. ...
  8. Zeus.
Apr 18, 2024

Can a virus like The Last of Us exist? ›

The zombie fungus is not capable of infecting humans. It is actually common in some health supplements and in Chinese herbal medicine as it can improve immunity and possibly be helpful in fighting cancer cells or shrinking tumor size.

What is the oldest computer virus in the world? ›

The world's first computer virus, known as Creeper, was first deployed on ARPANET networks in 1971 with the message “I'm the creeper, catch me if you can!” appearing on the screens of affected computers. Surprisingly, the creators of Creeper did not deploy the virus with malicious intent.

Who is the hacker of ILOVEYOU virus? ›

In May of 2000, a young hacker in the Philippines named Onel de Guzman created an email worm that would change the way the world thought about cybersecurity.

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