Malware Stocks List

Related ETFs - A few ETFs which own one or more of the above listed Malware stocks.

Malware Stocks Recent News

Date Stock Title
Nov 21 PANW Dow Jones Rises On Surprise Jobless Claims; Nvidia Reverses From Record Highs
Nov 21 PANW Palo Alto Networks beats Q1 estimates, while guidance disappoints
Nov 21 PANW Q1 2025 Palo Alto Networks Inc Earnings Call
Nov 21 PANW Wells Fargo lifts target price on Palo Alto even as stock dip post results
Nov 21 CRWD 3 US Stocks Estimated To Be Trading At Discounts Of Up To 39.3%
Nov 21 PANW Palo Alto dips, but analysts stay bullish after 'strong' Q1, billings 'miss'
Nov 21 CRWD CrowdStrike ticks up as Cantor Fitzgerald ups price target ahead of Q3 results
Nov 21 PANW Palo Alto Stock Is Falling After Earnings Beat. Why This Metric’s Worrying Analysts.
Nov 21 PANW Palo Alto Networks Q1 Earnings: Platforming For Success; Mixed Growth Profile
Nov 21 PANW These Stocks Are Moving the Most Today: Nvidia, Snowflake, MicroStrategy, Palo Alto, PDD, Deere, and More
Nov 21 PANW Nvidia shares slip, Snowflake surges: Yahoo Finance
Nov 21 PANW 3 Unstoppable Growth Stocks to Buy if There's a Stock Market Sell-Off
Nov 21 CYBR CyberArk Achieves QC1 Certification From Italian National Cybersecurity Agency
Nov 21 PANW Palo Alto Networks Inc (PANW) Q1 2025 Earnings Call Highlights: Strong Revenue Growth and ...
Nov 21 PANW Palo Alto Networks (PANW) Q1 2025 Earnings Call Transcript
Nov 21 PANW Palo Alto Networks, Inc. (PANW) Q1 2025 Earnings Call Transcript
Nov 20 PANW Palo Alto Networks Full-Year Guidance Disappoints; Shares Slip
Nov 20 PANW NVIDIA Beats, After-Hours Yawns; PANW and SNOW Report, Too
Nov 20 PANW Palo Alto tops revenue and profit estimates on steady cybersecurity demand
Nov 20 PANW Palo Alto (PANW) Q1 Earnings: How Key Metrics Compare to Wall Street Estimates
Malware

Malware (a portmanteau for malicious software) is any software intentionally designed to cause damage to a computer, server, client, or computer network. Malware does the damage after it is implanted or introduced in some way into a target's computer and can take the form of executable code, scripts, active content, and other software. The code is described as computer viruses, worms, Trojan horses, ransomware, spyware, adware, and scareware, among other terms. Malware has a malicious intent, acting against the interest of the computer user—and so does not include software that causes unintentional harm due to some deficiency, which is typically described as a software bug.
Programs officially supplied by companies can be considered malware if they secretly act against the interests of the computer user. For example, Sony sold the Sony rootkit, which contained a Trojan horse embedded into CDs that silently installed and concealed itself on purchasers' computers with the intention of preventing illicit copying. It also reported on users' listening habits, and unintentionally created vulnerabilities that were then exploited by unrelated malware.One strategy for protecting against malware is to prevent the malware software from gaining access to the target computer. For this reason, antivirus software, firewalls and other strategies are used to help protect against the introduction of malware, in addition to checking for the presence of malware and malicious activity and recovering from attacks.

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