Archive-name: computer-virus/alt-faq/part2 Posting-Frequency: Fortnightly URL: http://www.sherpasoft.org.uk/acvFAQ/ Maintainer: Co-maintained by David Harley, Bruce Burrell, and George Wenzel -----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- alt.comp.virus (Frequently Asked Questions) ******************************************* Version 1.1 : Part 2 of 4 Last modified 19th August 1999 ("`-''-/").___..--''"`-._ `6_ 6 ) `-. ( ).`-.__.`) (_Y_.)' ._ ) `._ `. ``-..-' _..`--'_..-_/ /--'_.' ,' (il),-'' (li),' ((!.-' ADMINISTRIVIA ============= Disclaimer - - ---------- This document is an honest attempt to help individuals with computer virus-related problems and queries. It can *not* be regarded as being in any sense authoritative, and has no legal standing. The authors accept no responsibility for errors or omissions, or for any ill effects resulting from the use of any information contained in this document. NB It is not claimed that this document is up-to-date in all respects. Not all the views expressed in this document are those of the maintainers, and those views which *are* those of the maintainers are not necessarily shared by their respective employers. Copyright Notice - - ---------------- Copyright on all contributions to this FAQ remains with the authors and all rights are reserved. It may, however, be freely distributed and quoted - accurately, and with due credit. B-) It may not be reproduced for profit or distributed in part or as a whole with any product or service for which a charge is made, except with the prior permission of the copyright holders. To obtain such permission, please contact one of the co-maintainers of the FAQ. David Harley George Wenzel Bruce Burrell [Please check out the more detailed copyright notice at the beginning of Part 1 of the FAQ] - - -------------------------------------------------------------------- TABLE OF CONTENTS ================= See Part 1 of this FAQ for the full Table of Contents Part 2 ------ (8) What's the best anti-virus software (and where do I get it)? (9) Where can I get further information? (10) Does anyone know about * Mac viruses? * UNIX viruses? * macro viruses? * the AOLGold virus? * the PKZip300 trojan virus? * the xyz PC virus? * the Psychic Neon Buddha Jesus virus? * the blem wit virus * the Irina virus * Ghost * General Info on Hoaxes/Erroneous Alerts (11) Is it true that...? (12) Favourite myths * DOS file attributes protect executable files from infection * I'm safe from viruses because I don't use bulletin boards/shareware/Public Domain software * FDISK /MBR fixes boot sector viruses * Write-protecting suspect floppies stops infection * The write-protect tab always stops a disk write * I can infect my system by running DIR on an infected disk ================= (8) What's the best anti-virus software (and where do I get it)? In case it's not absolutely clear from the following, it simply isn't possible to answer the first part of this question. There are, however, some suggestions for sources of software and of information on particular packages, comparative reviews etc. The danger of this approach is that sites, servers, and packages come and go, and it isn't possible to keep track of all of them. If URL's in this section have changed, please inform the maintainers so that they may be updated. Most of the people who post here have their favourites: if you just ask which is the best, you'll generally get either a subjective "I like such and such", recommendation of a particular product by someone who works for that company, or a request to be more specific about your needs. Some of us who are heavily involved with virus control favour using more than one package and keeping track of the market. Don't trust anything you read in the non-technical press. Don't accept uncritically reviews in the computing press, either: even highly-regarded IT specialists often have little understanding of virus issues, and many journalists are specialists only in skimming and misinterpreting. Magazines like Virus Bulletin and Secure Computing are much better informed and do frequent comparative reviews, and are also informative about their testing criteria, procedures and virus suites. Recently, a number of articles have been posted here by people who've run their own tests on various packages. These are often of interest, but should not be accepted uncritically. (No-one's opinion should be accepted uncritically!) Valid testing of antivirus software requires a lot of care and thought, and not all those who undertake it have the resources, knowledge or experience to do it properly. You may get a more informed response if you specify what sort of system you have - DOS, Windows, Win95, WinNT, Mac? XT, AT, 386 or better? Is the system networked, and are you asking about protecting the whole network? (What sort of network?) Are you running NT, OS/2 or Win95, any of which involve special considerations? Be aware that there is more than one way of judging the effectiveness of a package - the sheer number of viruses detected; speed; tendency to false alarms; size (can you run it from a single floppy when necessary?); types of virus detection & prevention (not at all the same thing) offered (command-line scanning, TSR scanning, behaviour blocking, checksumming, access-control, integrity shell etc.); technical support etc. One possible (but imperfect) measure of a package's efficiency in terms of virus detection is ICSA approval. Under the current testing protocol, a scanner must detect all viruses on the Wild List plus 90% of NCSA's full test suite. See http://www.icsa.net/services/product_cert/ for details. Comprehensive product reviews can sometimes be found at the following sites, but are not necessarily the latest available. http://www.virusbtn.com/ _Virus Bulletin_ http://www.westcoast.com/ _Secure Computing_ http://www.uta.fi/laitokset/virus/ University of Tampere ftp://ftp.informatik.uni-hamburg.de/pub/virus/ Virus Test Center and http://agn-www.informatik.uni-hamburg.de/vtc/naveng.htm http://victoria.tc.ca/int-grps/books/techrev/mnvr.html and a number of reputable vendors include comparative reviews, papers on testing etc. on their WWW/FTP servers. Many anti-virus packages are available from the SimTel mirrors: http://www.simtel.net/simtel.net/msdos/virus.html ftp://ftp.simtel.net/pub/simtelnet/msdos/virus/ For information on mirror sites, a regularly-updated listing can be found at http://www.simtel.net/simtel.net/mirrors.html Of course, such products can often be obtained direct from the publisher's WWW site, too. The following information is not intended to be a totally comprehensive list; it is merely a reference to where major anti-virus packages can be downloaded. Please note that the maintainers have not tested or even seen all the packages listed here, and listing here does not imply recommendation (though we won't list anything we *know* is rubbish....). - - ------------ AntiViral Toolkit Pro (commercial with evaluation versions) Platform(s): DOS, Win3.x, Win95/98, NT, OS/2, NetWare. URL: http://www.avp.com http://www.avp.ch http://www.avp.tm http://www.avp.ru - - ------------ AVAST!, AVAST32 (Commercial with evaluation versions) Platform(s): DOS, Win3.x, Win95/98, NT. URL: http://www.anet.cz/alwil/ - - ------------ Calluna Hardwall (Hardware-based virus protection) Platform(s): Win3.x, Win95, NT. URL: http://www.hardwall.com/ - - ------------ ChekMate (Integrity Checker; commercial w/ evaluation versions) Platform(s): DOS, Win3.x, Win95/98, OS/2. URL: http://chekware.simplenet.com/cmindex.htm - - ------------ ESafe Protect Platform(s): Win95/98, NT. URL: http://www.esafe.com/ - - ------------ F-Prot (Free for personal, non-commercial use) Platform(s): DOS with limited Windows support URL: http://www.complex.is - - ------------ F-Prot Professional (Commercial; distributed by both Command Software and DataFellows) Platform(s): DOS, Win3.x, Win95/98, WinNT, NetWare URL: http://www.commandcom.com/ http://www.DataFellows.com/ More details inc. in PRO.DOC, supplied with the shareware version. - - ------------ InoculateIT (formerly InocuLan) - Commercial with freeware version) Platform(s): Win95/98, NT, Netware. URL: http://www.cai.com/products/inoculateit.htm - - ------------ Integrity Master (Commercial with evaluation versions) Platform(s): DOS, Win3.x, Win95/98, NT, OS/2. URL: http://www.stiller.com - - ------------ Invircible (commercial with evaluation versions) Platform(s): DOS, Win3.x, Win95/98, NT. URL: http://www.invircible.com/ Note: The creators of InVircible have marketed it as the be-all and end-all of anti-virus products. As with any product, the buyer should beware such outlandish claims. - - ------------ McAfee VirusScan (also Dr. Solomon's products) - eval versions available Platform(s): DOS, Windows, Win95, NetWare, Mac, NT, Lotus Notes, Groupware, Exchange, SunOS, Solaris, FreeBSD, SCO, Linux. URL: http://www.nai.com - - ------------ Microsoft (Macro Virus fixes) URL: http://www.microsoft.com Note: Microsoft anti-virus (MSAV) is no longer supported. If you're using it, get something else (anything else). MSAV is not adequate protection as it does not protect against current viruses. There is a paper by Yisrael Radai which documents many of the other problems with MSAV and CPAV. ftp://ftp.informatik.uni-hamburg.de/pub/virus/texts/viruses/msaveval.zip - - ------------ MIMESweeper (Mail scanning 'firewall') Platform(s): Domino, SMTP, Exchange, Raptor URL: http://www.mimesweeper.com - - ------------ NH&A (Distributors of various anti-virus products; see URL for details) Platform(s): Various, depends on the product URL: http://www.nha.com - - ------------ Norman Virus Control Platform(s): DOS, Win3.x, Win95, NT, OS/2, NetWare, Lotus Domino, Exchange. URL: http://www.norman.com/ - - ------------ Norton Anti-virus, Symantec Anti-virus for Mac Platform(s): DOS, Win3.x, Win95/98, Mac (SAM), NT, NetWare, OS/2, Lotus Notes, Exchange. URL: http://www.symantec.com/ - - ------------ Panda Anti-Virus Platform(s): DOS, Win3.x, Win95/98, NT, OS/2. URL: http://www.pandasoftware.com - - ------------ PC-Cillin, InterScan, Scanmail, Serverprotect Platform(s): Win95/98, NT, Lotus Notes, Exchange, Outlook, cc:mail. URL: http://www.antivirus.com/ - - ------------ Reflex Magnetics Ltd - DiskNet, Macro Interceptor, and Data Vault Platform(s): Win95/98, NT. URL: http://www.reflex-magnetics.co.uk/ - - ------------ ScanMaster for Novell/Vines (Uses McAfee VirusScan engine) URL: http://www.netpro.com - - ------------ Sophos Sweep (commercial with evaluation versions) Platform(s): DOS, Win3.x, Win95/98, NT, Mac, OS/2, Netware, AIX, Linux, FreeBSD, HP-UX/HP-PA, SCO, Solaris, OpenVMS, Banyan VINES. URL: http://www.sophos.com/ - - ------------ VirusBUSTER, MacroVirusBUSTER, CyberBUSTER Platform(s): DOS, Win3.x, Win95/98, NT URL: http://www.leprechaun.com.au/ - - ------------ VirusNet Platform(s): DOS, Win3.x, Win95/98, NT URL: http://www.safetynet.com - - ------------ In the event of a *real* tragedy, there are a number of firms which specialise in data recovery. Examples include: Ontrack Data Recovery, Inc. URL: http://www.ontrack.com DataRescue: URL: http://www.datarescue.com/ (9) Where can I get further information? ======================================== The following sites are not regularly checked. Please advise of any changes which aren't reflected in this document. ftp://ftp.informatik.uni-hamburg.de/pub/virus/texts/ [mirror sites] ftp://ftp.uu.net/pub/security/virus/ ftp://sunsite.unc.edu/pub/docs/security/hamburg-mirror/virus/ http://www.SevenLocks.com/ http://www.hitchhikers.net/av.shtml http://csrc.ncsl.nist.gov/virus http://www.nc5.infi.net/~wtnewton/vinfo/master.html Virus Bulletin Home Page - vendor contact info, comparative reviews, review protocol info etc. http://www.virusbtn.com Henri Delger's home page has much useful info and useful links http://pages.prodigy.net/henri_delger/index.htm Tom Simondi has written a freeware virus tutorial (VTUTOR11.ZIP). http://www.cknow.com/ Some information is available from The Scanner, an on-line anti-virus newsletter. It may not be entirely current, however. http://diversicomm.com/scanner Doug Muth has not only AV links but geek code as well.... http://www.claws-and-paws.com/ Bob Rosenberger's Computer Virus Myths Page http://www.kumite.com/myths/ A few Amiga links: http://ftp.uni-paderborn.de/aminet/dirs/util_virus.html [Antivirus info and programs] ftp://ftp.uni-paderborn.de/aminet/util/virus/ According to Dennis Boon, trsivw65.lha has info about 100 or so viruses; VT_docfiles.lha has info on nearly all amiga viruses (in German); VIB9508.lha file contains info on all viruses up to August 1995 (in English). The WildList (List of viruses currently 'in the wild' - doesn't include much description) http://www.wildlist.org Virus Descriptions - - ------------------ http://www.avpve.com AVP Virus Encyclopedia http://www.datafellows.com/vir-info/ Data Fellows Virus Database http://www.symantec.com/avcenter/vinfodb.html Symantec Virus Database http://www.avertlabs.com McAfee Virus Database Virus demonstrations - - -------------------- AVP includes some virus demonstrations, and other publishers have demos available. There are also virus simulators, which are not quite the same thing. These are sometimes advocated as a means of testing antivirus packages, but there are dangers to this approach: after all, a package which detects one of these simulators as the virus it detects is, technically, false-alarming. See section F6 of the Mark 2 Virus-L FAQ, which is rather good on types and uses of virus simulation. Books which may be of use: Robert Slade's Guide to Computer Viruses - Springer-Verlag Pretty good introduction & general resource. Currently in its second edition. Computers Under Attack (ed. Denning) - Addison-Wesley Aging, but some classic texts Survivors' Guide to Computer Viruses (ed. Lammer) - Virus Bulletin Uneven, but includes useful stuff from Virus Bulletin Dr. Solomon's Virus Encyclopedia You may from time to time find copies of an older edition of this in bookshops, though it's better known as part of Dr. Solomon's AntiVirus ToolKit. It's a pretty good guide to some of the older viruses. A Short Course on Computer Viruses (F. Cohen) - Wiley By the man who 'invented' the concept of computer viruses. Some aspects are controversial, but a good introduction to his work. The comp.virus FAQ includes pointers to some books. Useful (and expensive) periodicals: Virus Bulletin http://www.virusbtn.com Secure Computing http://www.westcoast.com Computers and Security Elsevier Advanced Technology PO Box 150 Kidlington Oxford OX5 1AS 44 (0) 1865-843666 a.verhoeven@elsevier.co.uk The Disaster Recovery Journal (more info & on-line articles) http://www.drj.com (10) Does anyone know about... ============================== ...Mac viruses? - - --------------- David Harley co-maintains (with Susan Lesch) a FAQ on Mac/virus issues, which can be found at: http://www.macvirus.com/ http://www.sherpasoft.com/MacSupporters/ Mac-specific virus information: http://www.symantec.com http://www.nai.com http://www.sherpasoft.com/MacSupporters/ http://www.hyperactivesw.com http://ciac.llnl.gov/ciac/CIACVirusDatabase.html/ ...UNIX viruses? - - ---------------- In general, there are virtually no non-experimental UNIX viruses. There have been a few Worm incidents, most notably the Morris Worm (a.k.a. the Internet Worm) of 1988, and a couple of minor Linux viruses. Some Linux viruses exist, but are not widespread. There are products which scan some Unix systems for PC viruses, though any machine used as a file server (Novell, Unix etc.) can be scanned for PC viruses by a DOS scanner if it can be mounted as a logical drive on a PC running appropriate network client software such as PC-NFS. Unix servers running as webserver, ftp servers, intranet servers etc. should be considered as a potential source of files infected with viruses specific to other platforms, even if they are not directly infectable themselves. This problem is sometimes referred to as the 'latent virus problem', or 'heterogeneous virus transmission'. Intel-based PCs running Unix (e.g. Linux, 386BSD, SCO Unix etc.) can also be infected by a DOS boot-sector virus if booted from an infected disk. The same goes for other PC-hosted operating systems such as NetWare. While viruses are not a major risk on Unix platforms, integrity checkers and audit packages are frequently used by system administrators to detect file changes made by other kinds of attack. However, Unix security is outside the scope of this FAQ (see comp.security.unix). In fact, such packages generally target PC viruses more than the handful of Unix viruses. See also the Unix section in the Virus-L/comp.virus FAQ. A useful book: Practical Unix Security & Internet Security (Garfinkel, Spafford) - O'Reilly ...macro viruses? - - ----------------- Macro viruses and trojans are specific to certain applications which use sophisticated macro languages, rather than being specific to a particular operating system. Macro viruses comprise a high percentage of the viruses now in the wild. Most current macro viruses and trojans are specific to Microsoft Word and Excel: however, many applications, not all of them Windows applications, have potentially damaging and/or infective macro capabilities too. Macro languages such as WordBasic and Visual Basic for Applications (VBA) are powerful programming languages in their own right. Word and Excel are particularly vulnerable to this threat, due to the way in which the macro language is bound to the command/menu structure in vulnerable versions of Word, the way in which macros and data can exist in the same file, and the eccentricities of OLE-2. For further info on macro viruses, you might like to try the main antivirus vendor sites. ...The AOLgold virus - - -------------------- This was actually a trojan. Information is available on the CIAC archive: You can get this and other CIAC notices from the CIAC Computer Security Archive. World Wide Web: http://ciac.llnl.gov/ ...the PKZip trojan virus? - - -------------------------- Most of us prefer to distinguish between trojans and viruses (see Part 1). The threat described in recent warnings is definitely not a virus, since it doesn't replicate by infection. There have been at least two attempts to pass off Trojans as an upgrade to PKZip, the widely used file compression utility. A recent example was of the files PKZ300.EXE and PKZ300B.ZIP made available for downloading on the Internet. An earlier Trojan passed itself off as version 2.0. For this reason, PKWare have never released a version 2.0 of PKZip: presumably, if they ever do release another DOS version (unlikely, at this date, in my opinion), it will not be numbered version 3.0(0). In fact, there are hardly any known cases of someone downloading and being hit by this Trojan, which few people have seen (though most reputable virus scanners will detect it). As far as I know, this Trojan was only ever seen on warez servers (specialising in pirated software). There are recorded instances of a fake PKZIP vs. 3 found infected with a real live in-the-wild file virus, but this too is very rare. To the best of my knowledge, the latest version of PKZip is 2.04g, or 2.50 for Windows. There was a version 2.06 put together specifically for IBM internal use only (confirmed by PKWare). If you find it in circulation, avoid it. It's either illicit or a potentially damaging fake. The recent rash of resuscitated warnings about this is at least in part a hoax. It's not a virus, it's a trojan. It doesn't (and couldn't) damage modems, V32 or otherwise, though I suppose a virus or trojan might alter the settings of a modem - if it happened to be on and connected.... I don't want to get into hypothetical arguments about programmable modems right now. It appears to delete files, not destroy disks irrevocably. It's certainly a good idea to avoid files claiming to be PKZip vs. 3, but the real risk hardly justifies the bandwidth this alert has occupied. ...xyz PC virus? - - ---------------- There are several thousand known PC viruses, and the number 'in the wild' is in the hundreds. It is not practical to include information about all of these in this FAQ. There are rarely enquiries about viruses on other computing platforms raised in alt.comp.virus, but there is some information concerning viruses on most platforms available at the Virus Test Center in Hamburg. See the section above on Virus Descriptions for sites where information is available. ...the Psychic Neon Buddha Jesus virus? - - --------------------------------------- This is an allegedly humorous bit of javascript programming that found its way onto a website. On clicking on a particular button, you may be told that this virus has been detected.Javascript has many interesting properties, but virus detection is not one of them. It was a joke, and it's long gone, though others like it pop up from time to time. ...the blem wit virus? - - ---------------------- See the Virus-L FAQ. Basically, it's a mangled message that may come up with older Novell drivers "[pro]blem wit[h]....." The Irina Virus? - - ---------------- Publicity stunt generated by Penguin Books to promote their 'interactive novel'. More info in the 'Viruses and the Mac' FAQ, a CIAC bulletin on hoax and semi-hoax viruses, the Computer Virus Myths website (http://www.kumite.com/myths/) and many other sources. GHOST - - ----- Just a screensaver...... More info in the CIAC bulletin mentioned above and/or the Computer Virus myths website. General Info on Hoaxes/Erroneous Alerts - - --------------------------------------- The CIAC updated bulletion mentioned several times above is at: http://ciac.llnl.gov/ciac/bulletins/h-05.shtml It includes info on the alerts mentioned below, some historical background, and suggestions on validating hoaxes rather than passing them on uncritically. CIAC have now set up a hoaxes web page at: http://ciac.llnl.gov/ciac/CIACHoaxes.html There's also a page on chain letters which includes relevant material. There are lots of useful links at: http://www.kumite.com/myths - - -----------------extract------------------------------- INFORMATION BULLETIN H-05 Internet Hoaxes: PKZ300, Irina, Good Times, Deeyenda, Ghost November 20, 1996 16:00 GMT PROBLEM: This bulletin addresses the following hoaxes and erroneous warnings: PKZ300 Warning, Irina, Good Times, Deeyenda, and Ghost.exe PLATFORM: All, via e-mail DAMAGE: Time lost reading and responding to the messages SOLUTION: Pass unvalidated warnings only to your computer security department or incident response team. See below on how to recognize validated and unvalidated warnings and hoaxes. VULNERABILITY New hoaxes and warnings have appeared on the Internet and old ASSESSMENT: hoaxes are still being cirulated. - - ---------------------end extract-------------------------------- (11) Is it true that....? ========================= (*or* some favourite hoaxes...) (1) There is *no* Good Times virus that trashes your hard disk and launches your CPU into an nth-complexity binary loop when you read mail with "Good Times" in the Subject: field. You can get a copy of Les Jones' FAQ on the Good Times Hoax from: http://www.public.usit.net/lesjones/goodtimes.html There *is* at least one file virus christened Good Times by the individual who posted it in an attempt to cause confusion. It is more commonly referred to as GT-spoof. (2) There is no modem virus that spreads via an undocumented subcarrier - whatever that means.... (3) Any file virus can be transmitted as an E-mail attachment. However, the virus code has to be executed before it actually infects. Sensibly configured mailers don't usually allow this by default and without prompting, but certainly some mailers can support this: for instance, cc:mail can, it seems, launch attachments straight into AmiPro. There's room for a lot of discussion here. The jury is still out on web browsers: Netscape can certainly be set up to do things I don't approve of, such as opening a Word document in Word without asking. Microsoft have made available a Word viewer which reads Word files, but doesn't run attached macros. If possible, use this instead. If you have both Word and the Word Viewer, it is a good idea to set the Word Viewer as the default association instead of Word itself. This protects you from macro viruses to a certain extent, while not preventing you from using Word to edit documents (just use file/open instead of double-clicking on the file). The term 'ANSI bomb' usually refers to a mail message or other text file that takes advantage of an 'enhancement' to the MS-DOS ANSI.SYS driver which allows keys to be redefined with an escape sequence, in this case to echo some potentially destructive command to the console. In fact, few systems nowadays run programs which need ANSI terminal emulation to run, and there's no guarantee that the program reading the file would pass such an escape sequence unfiltered to the console anyway. There are plenty of PD or shareware alternatives to ANSI.SYS that don't support keyboard redefinition, or allow it to be turned off. The term mail bomb is usually applied to the intentional bombardment of an e-mail address with multiple copies of a (frequently abusive) message, rather than to the above. (4) There is no known way in which a virus could sensibly be spread by a graphics file such as a JPEG or .GIF file, which does not contain executable code. Macro viruses work because the files to which they are attached are not 'pure' data files. (5) In general, software cannot physically damage hardware - this includes viruses. There is a possibility that specific hardware may be damaged by specific code: however, a virus which drops a particular payload on the offchance that it's running on a system with a particular type of obsolete video card seems more than usually futile. At least one virus (named CIH, AKA Chernobyl) contains code that can overwrite BIOS code on some machines. This does not constitute hardware damage, since the chip involved is still intact. Problem is, without the appropriate software on that chip, the system won't boot. Repair from this payload generally involves reprogramming the BIOS chip, which can be more expensive than just buying a new motherboard. (12) Favourite myths ==================== * DOS file attributes protect executable files from infection File attributes are set by software, and can therefore be changed by software, including viruses. Many viruses reset a ReadOnly/System/Hidden file to Read/Write, infect it, and often reset it to the original attributes afterwards. This also applies to other software mechanisms such as simulating hardware write-protection on a hard disk. However, file protection rights in NetWare *can* help to contain virus infections, if set up properly, as can trustee rights. [Trustee assignments govern whether an individual user has right of access to a subdirectory: the Inherited Rights Mask governs the protection rights of individual files and (sub)directories.] Basically, a file virus has the same rights of access as the user who happens to inadvertantly activate it. Setting up these levels of security is really a function of the network Administrator, but you might like to check (politely) that yours is not only reassuringly paranoid but also knowledgeable about viruses as well as networks, since a LAN which is not, in this respect, securely configured, can result in very rapid infection and reinfection of files across the whole LAN. In particular, accounts with supervisor equivalence can, potentially, be the unwitting cause of very rapid dissemination of viruses. [See also the comp.virus FAQ (version 2) section D] * I'm safe from viruses because I don't use bulletin boards/shareware/ Public Domain software. Many of the most widely-spread viruses are Boot Sector Infectors, which can't normally infect over a serial or network connection. Writers of shareware, freeware etc. are no more prone to accidental infection than commercial publishers, and possibly less. The only 'safe' PC is still in it's original wrapping (which doesn't mean it isn't already infected...) And don't forget that shrinkwrapped software may have been rewrapped. As well, the most common viruses today are macro viruses, which depend on you running a commercial application (usually MS Word or Excel). They spread via documents exchanged between computers, which is a common occurrance on many systems, regardless of how 'connected' they are. * FDISK /MBR fixes boot sector viruses. The mark II comp.virus FAQ is worth reading on this (see Part 1 of this FAQ as well as Part 4, section 14). In brief, don't use FDISK /MBR *unless* you're *very* sure of what you're doing, as you may lose data. Note also that if you set up the drive with a disk manager such as EZDrive, you won't be able to access the drive until and unless you can reinstall it. ****************************************************************** (i) What does FDISK /MBR do? ------------------------ It places "clean" partition code onto the partition of your hard disk. It does not necessarily change the partition information, however. [It does sometimes, and when it does it us usually fatal (for the common user, anyway). FDISK /MBR will wipe the partition table data if the last two bytes of the MBR are not 55 AA.] The /MBR command-line switch is not officially documented in all DOS versions and was introduced in DOS 5.0 (ii) What is the partition? ---------------------- The partition sector is the first sector on a hard disk. It contains information about the disk such as the number of sectors in each partition, where the DOS partition starts, plus a small program. The partition sector is also called the "Master Boot Record" (MBR). When a PC starts up it reads the partition sector and executes the code it finds there. Viruses that use the partition sector modify this code. Since the partition sector is not part of the normal data storage part of a disk, utilities such as DEBUG will not allow access to it. [Unless one assembles into memory] Floppy disks do not have a partition sector. FDISK /MBR will change the code in a hard disk partition sector. (iii) What is a boot sector? ---------------------- The boot sector is the first sector on a floppy disk. On a hard disk it is the first sector of a partition. It contains information about the disk or partition, such as the number of sectors, plus a small program. When the PC starts up it attempts to read the boot sector of a disk in drive A:. If this fails because there is no disk it reads the boot sector of drive C:. A boot sector virus replaces this sector with its own code and usually moves the original elsewhere on the disk. Even a non-bootable floppy disk has executable code in its boot sector. This displays the "not bootable" message when the computer attempts to boot from the disk. Therefore, non-bootable floppies can still contain a virus and infect a PC if it is inserted in drive A: when the PC starts up. FDISK /MBR will not change the code in a hard disk boot sector (as opposed to the partition sector). Most boot sector viruses infect the partition sector of hard disks and floppy disk boot sectors: most do not infect the boot sector of a hard disk - the Form virus is an exception. (iv) How can I remove a virus from my hard disk's partition sector? -------------------------------------------------------------- There are two main alternatives: run an anti-virus product, or use FDISK /MBR. Most effective anti-virus products will be able to remove a virus from a partition sector, but some have difficulties under certain circumstances. In these cases the user may decide to use FDISK /MBR. Unless you know precisely what you are doing this is unwise. You may lose access to the data on your hard disk if the infection was done by a virus such as Monkey or OneHalf. Part 4, section 14 of this FAQ contains details as to how losing data might happen. (v) Won't formatting the hard disk help? ------------------------------------ Not necessarily. Formatting the hard disk can result in everything being wiped from the drive *apart* from the virus. Format alters the DOS partition, but leaves the partition sector (AKA the MBR) untouched. There is usually a better way of removing a virus infection than formatting the hard disk. ****************************************************************** * Write protecting suspect floppies stops infection. This sounds so silly I hesitate to include it. I've never seen it said on a.c.v., but I've heard it so often in other contexts, I've included it anyway. Write-protecting a suspect floppy will only protect that diskette from *re-infection*, if it's already infected. It won't stop an infected floppy from infecting other (write-enabled) drives. If you boot with a disk in drive A which is infected with a boot-sector virus, the fact that the diskette is write-protected will make no difference at all. Write-protecting a *clean* floppy will indeed prevent it from being infected (but see below!). * The write protect tab always stops a disk write Briefly, write protection is built into the hardware on the Mac and on the PC (and most other systems, of course, but we can't cover everything), and can't be circumvented in software. However, it is possible for the hardware to fail: it's not common, but it happens. Thus when I do a cleanup, I try to create a file on a sacrificial floppy before risking my R/O boot disk. Sometimes, I even remember.... Other caveats: a disk which you receive write-protected could have been de-protected, infected, and re-protected. Even a 3.5" disk with the write-enable tab removed can be written to by covering the hole with (e.g.) masking tape. And, of course, shrink-wrapped software could have been infected before the duplication process. * I can infect my system by running DIR on an infected disk If you have a clean PC system, you can't contract a boot sector virus *or* a file virus just by listing the files on an infected floppy. Of course, if your PC is infected, you may well infect a *clean* floppy by using DIR A: It *is* possible to have a scanner report a virus in memory after a DIR of a floppy with an infected boot sector. The distinction here is that the virus is not actually loaded into memory, so the PC has *not* been infected. - - ----------------------------------------------------------------------- End of a.c.v. 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