Trojan and UKP: Difference between pages

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imported>Doug Williamson
(Add origin - source - Wikipedia - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trojan_Horse#:~:text=Trojan%20Horse%20refers%20to%20a,briefly%20mentioned%20in%20the%20Odyssey.)
 
imported>Doug Williamson
(Create the page.)
 
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''Cyberthreats''.
UKP is an abbreviation sometimes used for the United Kingdom (Great Britain) pound sterling, whose ISO currency code is [[GBP]].


A trojan is computer software designed to breach the security of a system, while ostensibly performing a useful or innocuous function.
However, UKP is not the ISO code.


'Trojan' is an abbreviation of 'Trojan horse'.


 
== See also ==
The term originates from the myth in which soldiers attacking Troy hid inside an innocuous wooden horse, that the defenders then pulled through the gates of their own besieged city.
* [[Pound]]
 
* [[Pound sterling]]
 
* [[ISO currency codes]]
==See also==
* [[GBP]]
*[[Cyber security]]
*[[Cyberthreat]]
*[[Malware]]
*[[Ransomware]]
 
[[Category:Identify_and_assess_risks]]

Revision as of 10:39, 17 January 2016

UKP is an abbreviation sometimes used for the United Kingdom (Great Britain) pound sterling, whose ISO currency code is GBP.

However, UKP is not the ISO code.


See also