During the Morris appeal process, the US court of appeals estimated the cost of removing the virus from each installation was in the range of $200–$53,000. Possibly based on these numbers, Stoll, a
systems administrator known for discovering and subsequently tracking the hacker
Markus Hess three years earlier, estimated for the US
Government Accountability Office that the total economic impact was between $100,000 and $10,000,000. Stoll helped fight the worm, writing in 1989 that "I surveyed the network, and found that two thousand computers were infected within fifteen hours. These machines were dead in the water—useless until disinfected. And removing the virus often took two days." Stoll commented that the worm showed the danger of
monoculture, because "If all the systems on the
ARPANET ran
Berkeley Unix, the virus would have disabled all fifty thousand of them." It is usually reported that around 6,000 major UNIX machines were infected by the Morris worm. Graham claimed, "I was there when this statistic was cooked up, and this was the recipe: someone guessed that there were about 60,000 computers attached to the Internet, and that the worm might have infected ten percent of them". Stoll estimated that "only a couple thousand" computers were affected.
Gene Spafford also created the Phage mailing list to coordinate a response to the emergency. Morris was tried and convicted of violating
United States Code Title18 (), the
Computer Fraud and Abuse Act, in
United States v. Morris. After appeals, he was sentenced to three years' probation, 400 hours of community service, and a fine of plus the costs of his supervision. The total fine ran to , which included a $10,000 fine, $50 special assessment, and $3,276 cost of probation oversight. The Morris worm has sometimes been referred to as the "Great Worm", named after the devastating "
Great Worms" of
Tolkien. The Morris worm had a devastating effect on the Internet at that time, both in overall system downtime and in psychological impact on the perception of security and reliability of the Internet. == In popular culture ==