Nomenklatura Virus
Virus Name: Nomenklatura
Aliases: Nomenclature, 1024-B, Nomen
V Status: Common
Discovered: August, 1990
Symptoms: .EXE, .COM growth; decrease in available free memory; "sector
not found" messages on diskettes;
Origin: Netherlands
Eff Length: 1,024 Bytes
Type Code: PRhAK - Parasitic Resident .COM & .EXE Infector
Detection Method: ViruScan, NAV, AVTK, F-Prot, Sweep, IBMAV,
NAVDX, VAlert, PCScan, ChAV,
NShld, LProt, Sweep/N, Innoc, NProt, AVTK/N,
NAV/N, IBMAV/N
Removal Instructions: Delete infected files
General Comments:
The Nomenklatura virus was isolated in August, 1990 in the
Netherlands. This virus is a memory resident infector of .COM and
.EXE files, including COMMAND.COM. It is not related to the V1024
virus, though it is the same length.
The first time a program infected with the Nomenklatura virus is
executed on a system, the virus installs itself memory resident at
the top of available system memory, but below the 640K DOS
boundary. Available system memory will decrease by 1,024 bytes, and
interrupt 21 will be hooked by the virus.
When the virus is memory resident, any .COM or .EXE program greater
in length then approximately 1,023 bytes that is executed or opened
for any reason will be infected by the Nomenklatura virus.
Infected files will have their file lengths increased by 1,024
bytes. The virus does not hide the increase in file length when
the disk directory is displayed.
Attempts to execute uninfected programs from a write-protected
diskette with the virus in memory will result in a "Sector not
found error" message being displayed, and the program not being
executed.
The Nomenklatura virus is destructive to the contents of diskettes
exposed to infected systems. File corruption will randomly occur,
with the frequency increasing as the disk becomes more filled with
data. The file errors may occur on data files as well program
files. This file corruption occurs due to the virus occasionally
swapping a pair of words in the sector buffer. It may also do this
to critical system areas such as the FAT, boot sector, or
directories since it may occur to any clusters on the disk. If a
file or critical system area was residing in a corrupted cluster,
it will be corrupted. As such, systems which has been exposed to
the Nomenklatura virus must be carefully checked as the integrity
of non-infected programs and any data files should be considered
suspect.
The virus has been named Nomenklatura as this text string appears
in all programs infected with this virus.