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Just thinking about how wild that ILOVEYOU virus incident was back in 2000. A 24-year-old named Onel de Guzman basically crashed the internet with a worm that disguised itself as love letters in email attachments. Wild times.
The scale was insane - we're talking 10 million infected computers globally and somewhere between 5 to 20 billion dollars in damages. Imagine being responsible for that kind of chaos at that age. But here's the crazy part: Onel de Guzman actually never faced criminal charges because the Philippines didn't have cybersecurity laws on the books back then. No laws meant no prosecution, even with that level of destruction.
What's interesting is how that incident basically forced the world to wake up. Governments started taking cybersecurity seriously after that. The ILOVEYOU case became a turning point - it influenced how countries developed their digital security frameworks and how people thought about opening suspicious email attachments.
Thinking about it now, that Onel de Guzman situation is a perfect example of how technology moved faster than regulation. One person, one piece of code, and suddenly everyone's rethinking their security. Would you have clicked on that "love letter" back then? Most people did, and that's exactly why it spread so fast.
It's a reminder that cybersecurity isn't just about tech - it's about awareness and having the right legal framework in place. Pretty foundational stuff for where we are today with digital security.