On this day January 30 1982, the first known personal computer virus was written by 15 year old Richard Skrenta from Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Created as a harmless experiment, the program spread through floppy disks and displayed a simple message after a certain number of uses, marking the earliest known example of self replicating software on personal computers.
The event became a landmark moment in computer history, foreshadowing the rise of computer security challenges that would grow alongside personal technology. What began as a teenage experiment highlighted how quickly innovation and unintended consequences could intersect as computers entered everyday life during the early 1980s.
80s insight: The early 1980s laid the groundwork for both personal computing and digital security concerns.
The event became a landmark moment in computer history, foreshadowing the rise of computer security challenges that would grow alongside personal technology. What began as a teenage experiment highlighted how quickly innovation and unintended consequences could intersect as computers entered everyday life during the early 1980s.
80s insight: The early 1980s laid the groundwork for both personal computing and digital security concerns.
