Mario Virus


 Virus Name:  Mario 
 Aliases:     Mario.673 
 V Status:    New 
 Discovered:  January, 1996 
 Symptoms:    .EXE file growth; TSR 
 Origin:      Unknown 
 Eff Length:  673 - 689 Bytes 
 Type Code:   PRsE - Parasitic Resident .EXE Infector 
 Detection Method:  F-Prot 2.22+, AVTK 7.60+, IBMAV 2.41D+, ViruScan 2.51+, 
                    NAV 3.09 9607+, NAVBoot 0.A 9607+, PCScan, ChAV, 
                    AVTK/N 7.60+, NAV/N 2.0 9607+, NShld 2.32 9607+, 
                    Innoc 4.0+ 
 Removal Instructions:  Delete infected files 
 
 General Comments: 
       The Mario or Mario.673 virus was received in January, 1996, along 
       with one variant, Mario.746.  Mario is a memory resident infector 
       of .EXE files. 
 
       When the first Mario infected program is executed, this virus will 
       install itself memory resident as a low system memory TSR of 992 
       bytes.  Interrupts 18, 21, and 24 will be hooked by the virus in 
       memory. 
 
       Once the Mario virus is memory resident, it may infect .EXE files 
       when they are executed or opened, but not on copy, though it does 
       not always infect .EXE files it encounters.  Programs infected with 
       the Mario virus will have a file length increase of 673 to 689 bytes 
       with the virus being located at the end of the file.  The program's 
       date and time in the DOS disk directory listing will not be altered. 
       The following text string is visible within the viral code: 
 
           "Mario Genius" 
 
       It is unknown what the Mario virus may do besides replicate. 
 
       Known variant(s) of Mario are: 
       Mario.746: Also received in January, 1996, this is a 746 byte 
           variant of the Mario virus described above.  It becomes memory 
           resident at the top of system memory but below the 640K DOS 
           boundary, hooking interrupts 18 and 21.  Available free memory, 
           as indicated by the DOS CHKDSK program from DOS 5.0, will have 
           decreased by 1,296 bytes.  Once resident, this variant may 
           infect .EXE files when they are executed or opened, but not on 
           copy.  Infected programs will have a file length increase of 
           746 to 760 bytes with the virus being located at the end of the 
           file.  The program's date and time in the DOS disk directory 
           listing will not be altered.  No text strings are visible within 
           the viral code. 
           Origin:  Unknown  January, 1996. 

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