Seneca-B Virus
Virus Name: Seneca-B
Aliases:
V Status: Viron
Discovered: January, 1993
Symptoms: .COM & .EXE files overwritten; program & data file corruption;
boot failure; program date/time changes
Origin: United States
Eff Length: 493 Bytes OW
Type Code: ONAK - Non-Resident Overwriting File Infector
Detection Method: ViruScan, Sweep, AVTK, F-Prot, IBMAV, NAVDX,
NAV, VAlert, PCScan, ChAV,
NShld, Sweep/N, Innoc, NProt, AVTK/N, LProt, IBMAV/N,
NAV/N
Removal Instructions: Delete infected files
General Comments:
The Seneca-B virus was submitted in January, 1993. Seneca-B is
a non-resident overwriting virus which infects programs and data
files. It corrupts the files it infects.
When a program infected with the Seneca-B virus is executed, the
Seneca-B virus will infect all of the files located in the
current directory by overwriting the first 493 bytes of the host
file. The virus does not differentiate between program and data
files, so besides program corruption, data file corruption will
occur.
Programs and data files infected with the Seneca-B virus not have
an increase in file length as the virus will not infect a file
smaller than itself. The file's date and time in the DOS disk
directory listing will have been updated to the current system
date and time. The following text string is encrypted within the
Seneca-B viral code:
"*.* .."