African 109 Virus
Virus Name: African 109
Aliases: 109
V Status: Rare
Discovery: January, 1992
Symptoms: .COM file growth; file date/time change
Origin: Republic of South Africa
Eff Length: 109 Bytes
Type Code: PNCK - Parasitic Non-Resident .COM Infector
Detection Method: ViruScan, F-Prot, Sweep, AVTK, NAV, NAVDX,
IBMAV, VAlert, PCScan, ChAV,
NShld, LProt, Sweep/N, Innoc, NProt, AVTK/N,
NAV/N, IBMAV/N
Removal Instructions: Delete infected files
General Comments:
The African 109 virus was isolated in January, 1992 in the
Republic of South Africa by Oliver Steudler and Peter Stoffberg
of the Virus Resource Centre. African 109 is a non-resident,
direct action infector of .COM files, including COMMAND.COM.
When a program infected with African 109 is executed, the African
109 virus will infect all previously uninfected .COM files in the
current directory. If COMMAND.COM happens to be in this directory,
it will be infected as well.
Programs infected with African 109 will have a file length increase
of 109 bytes. The virus will be located at the beginning of the
infected file. The file's date and time in the DOS disk directory
will have been updated to the current system date and time when
infection occurred. One text string can be found in the viral code
in infected files:
"*.COM"
African 109 doesn't do anything besides replicate.