There have been many well-known trojans that have played an important role in the history of cybersecurity. An early example is the
AIDS trojan, developed in 1989. It is considered one of the first forms of ransomware, as it encrypted filenames on infected computers and demanded payment to restore them. A famous example is the
You Are An Idiot trojan, developed in 2002. It originated from a comedy sketch by American radio personality
Rick Dees on his 1984 album
Put It Where the Moon Don’t Shine. Specifically, the vocal jingle was featured during a prank call segment titled "Candid Phone: Dog Funeral." The audio later gained notoriety in the early 2000s when it was sampled for the YouAreAnIdiot.org website, which functioned as a browser-based trojan. This site overwhelmed users by displaying flashing black-and-white smiley faces while continuously looping the vocal track. It became a legendary "pop-up bomb" because it would spawn six new windows every time a user attempted to close one and disabled standard hotkeys like Alt+F4. While it did not cause permanent damage to files, it frequently exhausted system resources and caused computers to freeze. Safe versions of the website were later created without the spawn feature. Another famous example is the
Zeus trojan, first identified in 2007. Zeus mainly targeted Microsoft Windows systems and was designed to steal banking credentials through
man-in-the-browser attacks, which infected a user's browser to intercept and manipulate data, leading to widespread financial losses and data breaches. In 2015, in Ukraine, an attacker group, by means of an authenticated computer that was controlled remotely using a
remote access trojan, gained access to a controller server, that resulted in an electricity outage for 80.000 people. In 2016, the
MEMZ trojan, a Windows-based program, became widely recognized for its complex and destructive payloads. MEMZ gained notoriety for displaying unusual visual effects on infected machines and ultimately rendering the systems unusable.
Private and governmental •
ANOM – FBI •
0zapftis / r2d2 StaatsTrojaner – DigiTask •
FinFisher – Lench IT solutions / Gamma International •
DaVinci / Galileo RCS – HackingTeam •
Magic Lantern – FBI •
SUNBURST –
SVR/
Cozy Bear (suspected) •
TAO QUANTUM/FOXACID – NSA •
WARRIOR PRIDE – GCHQ
Publicly available •
EGABTR – late 1980s •
Netbus – 1998 (published) ==See also==