Stealth Boot.C Virus
Virus Name: Stealth Boot.C
Aliases: Amse, Nops.B, Stelboo
V Status: Common
Discovered: January, 1995
Symptoms: BSC; system hard disk master boot sector altered;
decrease in total system & available free memory;
drivers may fail to load into memory
Origin: Unknown
Eff Length: N/A
Type Code: RhBX - Resident Boot Sector & MBR Infector
Detection Method: Sweep, F-Prot, AVTK, IBMAV, ViruScan, NAVDX, VAlert,
NAV, PCScan, ChAV
Removal Instructions: DOS SYS on diskettes, F-Disk/MBR on hard disk
General Comments:
The Stealth Boot.C virus was received in January, 1995. It is a
memory resident stealth boot virus which infects the system hard
disk master boot sector (partition table sector) and diskette
boot sectors. It is in the public domain in North America.
When the system is booted for the first time from a Stealth Boot.C
infected diskette, this virus will install itself 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 4,096 bytes. Also at this time, the
virus will infect the system hard disk master boot sector if it was
not previously infected.
Once the Stealth Boot.C virus is memory resident, it will infect
diskette boot sectors when non-write protected diskettes are accessed.
Infected diskettes will have the original boot sector moved to the
last sector on the diskette.
Systems infected with Stealth Boot.C may experience difficulty
loading some driver and memory management software into memory,
resulting in operational difficulties with programs which access
upper memory blocks, such as Windows. It is reported to also cause
problems with 32-bit data access on some systems.
This virus is a full stealth virus, hiding the infection on the
system hard disk and diskette boot sectors when the virus is memory
resident. Therefore, it is important to be sure that the virus is
not memory resident before attempting to scan possibly infected
systems and diskettes, as well as booting from a known uninfected
system diskette before any attempt to disinfect the virus.