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Tool, Doctor, and Hooligan: History of Antivirus Software in China, 1989–2010

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This article examines how user communities and technological practices shaped distinctive conceptions of antivirus software in post-Socialist China from 1989 to 2010. Drawing on IT magazines, handbooks, journal articles, online… Click to show full abstract

This article examines how user communities and technological practices shaped distinctive conceptions of antivirus software in post-Socialist China from 1989 to 2010. Drawing on IT magazines, handbooks, journal articles, online forums, and official publications, we highlight three metaphors and meanings for antivirus software—a tool, a “doctor,” and a “hooligan”—arguing that these metaphors reflected evolving relations between the antivirus industry and computer users. This article contributes to two understudied areas of the history of computing. First, we build upon a small but crucial body of scholarship on the history of the computer security industry, which to date has focused primarily on the United States. Second, by centering our analysis on user communities in China, we broaden the dominant focus of computing historiography in China and East Asia, which has instead emphasized the achievements and activities of state institutions.

Keywords: antivirus software; history; 1989 2010; china 1989

Journal Title: IEEE Annals of the History of Computing
Year Published: 2023

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