Shark Tank: Virus calling
This company's head of maintenance is lording his fancy new computer over the guys who work for him. "He didn't really know how to use it, and it was basically just a big box for him to read e-mail and surf the Internet on," says an IT support pilot fish on the inside.
"One of his guys decided it was time he got a virus."
When fish gets the first call, the maintenance head is in a panic. He tells fish the antivirus software must not be working, because he has acquired the "ding dong" virus.
Fish is pretty sure there's no virus by that name, but he knows it's a big world and he doesn't know everything. So he downloads new virus definitions, runs another scan -- no virus found -- and assures the maintenance head that, as far as he can tell, the PC is clean.
A week later, there's another call from the maintenance head, this time to fish's boss -- who calls fish in about the unresolved problem. Sort of.
"My boss was laughing," fish reports. "He told me to just let the guy go. If I wanted, I could run scans, but my boss said to tell the guy that this particular virus didn't seem to do anything bad, it just annoyed people, and so far there was no fix for it.
"His guys had cracked open his box and installed a new peripheral: the chime set for a wireless doorbell. Then in random conversations, they talked about the new virus they had heard about.
"They did this over the course of two or three weeks before they ever touched the button to 'release the virus.'"
"That takes true dedication to your practical joke."
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