Trojan Horse
n.
large wooden horse which contained Greek warriors who surprise attacked the Trojans (Classical Mythology); something which is ostensibly good but brings harm; computer program which looks useful but contains a harmful code
Trojan Horse
Trojan Horse
Noun
1. a large hollow wooden figure of a horse (filled with Greek soldiers) left by the Greeks outside Troy during the Trojan War
(synonym) Wooden Horse
(hypernym) figure
(classification) Greece, Hellenic Republic, Ellas
Trojan horse
Noun
1. a subversive group that supports the enemy and engages in espionage or sabotage; an enemy in your midst
(synonym) fifth column
(hypernym) unit, social unit
(member-meronym) fifth columnist, saboteur
trojan horse
Noun
1. a program that appears desirable but actually contains something harmful; "the contents of a trojan can be a virus or a worm"; "when he downloaded the free game it turned out to be a trojan horse"
(synonym) trojan
(hypernym) malevolent program
Trojan Horse
[Greek heroic] When the Greeks had lain siege to Troy for ten years, without results, they pretended to retreat. They left behind a huge wooden horse, in which a number of Greek heroes, among whom Odysseus, had hidden themselves. The spy Sinon convinced the Trojans, despite the warnings of Laocoon, to move the horse inside the city as a war trophy. In the following night, the Greeks left the wooden horse and attacked the unsuspecting and celebrating Trojans, and finally conquered Troy.
Trojan horse
<
application,
security> (Coined by
MIT-hacker-turned-NSA-spook Dan Edwards) A malicious, security-breaking program that is disguised as something benign, such as a directory lister, archiver, game, or (in one notorious 1990 case on the Mac) a program to find and destroy
viruses! A Trojan horse is similar to a
back door.
See also
RFC 1135,
worm,
phage,
mockingbird.
[
Jargon File]
(1995-03-21)
(c) Copyright 1993 by Denis Howe