Ever thought about how a single piece of code could reshape global cybersecurity? Back in 2000, a 24-year-old from the Philippines named Onel de Guzman did exactly that. He created what would become one of the most infamous viruses in tech history - the ILOVEYOU worm.



Here's what made it so devastating: the malware spread through email attachments disguised as love letters. Sounds harmless, right? Except it wasn't. Within days, it infected around 10 million computers worldwide and caused somewhere between 5 to 20 billion dollars in damages. Governments, corporations, hospitals - everyone got hit.

But here's the wildest part: Onel de Guzman was never prosecuted. Why? Because in 2000, the Philippines simply didn't have laws against creating malware. He essentially operated in a legal gray zone that didn't exist yet.

That gap in the law became a turning point. The ILOVEYOU incident exposed how unprepared the world was for cybercriminals, and it directly led to countries worldwide strengthening their cybersecurity legislation. What started as a cautionary tale became a wake-up call for the entire tech industry.

So the question is - would you have fallen for that love letter email back then? Most people did. It's a reminder of how powerful social engineering can be, and why cybersecurity awareness matters more than ever.
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