Ripper Virus
Virus Name: Ripper
Aliases:
V Status: Common
Discovery: November, 1993
Isolated: April, 1995 (United States)
Symptoms: BSC; Master Boot Sector altered; disk corruption;
decrease in total system & available free memory
Origin: Norway
Eff Length: N/A
Type Code: PRhXB - Resident Boot Sector & MBR Infector
Detection Method: F-Prot, ViruScan, AVTK, ChAV,
IBMAV, NAV, Sweep, NAVDX, VAlert, PCScan
Removal Instructions: F-Prot, or F-Disk /MBR on Hard Disk, DOS SYS
on system diskettes
General Comments:
The Ripper virus was first reported in November, 1993 from Norway,
and shortly later from England. Many reports of this virus were
also received from sites in the United States during 1994. The
sample analyzed here was isolated in April, 1995 and is from the
United States. Ripper is a memory resident stealth virus which
infects diskette boot sectors and the system hard disk master
boot sector. It is a destructive virus.
Systems become infected with the Ripper virus when they are booted
or attempted to be booted from an infected diskette. At this time,
the Ripper virus will become memory resident at the top of system
memory but below the 640K DOS boundary. Total system and available
free memory, as indicated by the DOS CHKDSK program, will have
decreased by 2,048 bytes. Also at this time, the Ripper virus will
infect the system hard disk master boot sector if it was not
previously infected. If the diskette was a system diskette, then
the boot will proceed, if not, then the user will be prompted for
a system diskette. Once the system hard disk master boot sector has
been infected with the Ripper virus, the virus will become memory
resident when the system is booted from the system hard disk.
Once the Ripper virus is memory resident, it will infect any non-
write protected diskette which is accessed on the system. When the
Ripper virus infects diskettes, it copies the original boot sector
to the last sector of the root directory. On 5.25 inch double
density diskettes, this will be sector 11. On 5.25 inch high density
diskettes, it is sector 17. The Ripper viral code is two sectors
long, the first sector overwriting the original boot sector of the
diskette, and the second sector being written to the sector before
the last sector of the disk's root directory. No text strings are
visible within the viral code as the Ripper virus is an encrypted
virus. The following two text strings are encrypted within the
viral code:
"FUCK 'EM UP"
"(C)1992 Jack Ripper"
Ripper is a stealth virus, the virus preventing a read of the viral
code on the system hard disk and on diskette boot sectors when it
is memory resident. When a program attempts to read either a diskette
boot sector or the system hard disk master boot sector, the virus
will display the original boot sector or master boot sector. As
such, anti-viral programs cannot detect it on disk when the virus
is memory resident. If a Ripper viral infection is suspected, the
system should be cold booted from a known uninfected, write
protected system diskette and then checked. If a viral infection
is found, the user should then proceed with disinfection and also
check any non-write protected diskettes which have been accessed
on the system.
The Ripper virus is destructive, occassionally swapping two words in
the DOS write buffer, resulting in a slow and not too easily detected
corruption of disks. The corruption in the write buffer occurs on
a random basis of approximately 1 write in a 1,000.