NPox Virus


 Virus Name:  NPox 
 Aliases:     Evil Genius 
 V Status:    Common 
 Discovered:  July, 1992 
 Symptoms:    .COM & .EXE growth; decrease in total system & available free 
              memory; file time seconds = 58; overwrites sectors on hard 
              disk; trashes hard disk on 18th of month 
 Origin:      Canada 
 Eff Length:  963 Bytes 
 Type Code:   PRhAK - Parasitic Resident .COM & .EXE Infector 
 Detection Method:  ViruScan, IBMAV, F-Prot, Sweep, ChAV, 
                    AVTK, NAV, NAVDX, VAlert, PCScan, 
                    NShld, Sweep/N, Innoc, NProt, AVTK/N, LProt, 
                    NAV/N, IBMAV/N 
 Removal Instructions:  Delete infected files 
 
 General Comments: 
       The NPox, or Evil Genius, virus was simultaneously isolated in the 
       Eastern United States and Montreal, Canada in late July, 1992. 
       This virus is a memory resident stealth virus which infects .COM and 
       .EXE programs, including COMMAND.COM.  It is extremely destructive. 
 
       When the first NPox virus infected program is executed, 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 1,024 
       bytes.  Interrupt 12's return will not be moved.  Interrupts 09 and 
       21 will be hooked by NPox in memory.  The copy of COMMAND.COM located 
       in the C: drive root directory will also become infected at this time 
       if it was not previously infected. 
 
       Once memory resident, NPox will infect .COM and .EXE programs, 
       including COMMAND.COM, when they are executed.  Infected programs 
       will have a file length increase of 963 bytes with the virus being 
       located at the end of the file.  The file length increase, however, 
       will not be visible in the DOS disk directory listing when NPox 
       is resident.  Infected programs will also have the seconds field 
       of the file time in the DOS disk directory set to '58'.  This is the 
       infection marker for the virus. 
 
       The following text strings can be found within the viral code in 
       all NPox infected programs: 
 
               "Evil Genius V2.0 - R.S/NuKE" 
               "C:\COMMAND.COM" 
 
       Systems infected with NPox will not experience file allocation 
       errors on infected programs when the DOS CHKDSK program is executed 
       with the virus memory resident.  They may, however, find that random 
       sectors on the system hard disk have been overwritten, or that the 
       system hard disk is corrupted on the 18th of any month. 
 
       Known variant(s) of NPox are: 
       Evil Genius 2B: Functionally equivalent to the original virus, 
                       this variant has two bytes which differ. 
                       Origin:  Montreal, Canada  July, 1992. 
       Evil Genius 2C: Functionally equivalent to the original virus, 
                       this variant has seven bytes which differ. 
                       Origin:  Eastern United States  July, 1992. 
       NPox 2.0: Received in September, 1992, NPox 2.0 is based on the 
                 NPox virus described above.  It's size in memory is 1,856 
                 bytes, hooking interrupts 21 and 22.  NPox 2.0 infects 
                 .COM and .EXE programs when they are closed, and disinfects 
                 them as they are read into memory.  Infected files on disk 
                 will not appear to have any file length increase when 
                 NPox 2.0 is memory resident, though they have increased in 
                 size by 2,048 bytes.  The virus is located at the end of 
                 infected programs.  The seconds in the file date in the DOS 
                 disk directory will be set to 60 on all infected programs. 
                 Two text strings can be found in all infected programs: 
                 "NuKE PoX V2.0 - Rock Steady" 
                 "C:\COMMAND.COM" 
                 Origin:  Montreal, Canada  September, 1992. 
       NPox 2.1: Received in October, 1992, NPox 2.1 is based on the 
                 NPox 2.0 variant described above.  It's size in memory 
                 is 1,744 bytes, hooking interrupts 21 and 22.  NPox 2.1 
                 infects .COM and .EXE programs when they are closed, and 
                 disinfects them as they are read into memory.  Infected 
                 files on disk will not appear to have any file length 
                 increase when NPox 2.1 is memory resident, though they have 
                 increased in size by 1,686 bytes.  The virus is located at 
                 the end of infected programs.  The seconds in the file date 
                 in the DOS disk directory will be set to 60 on all infected 
                 programs.  Three text strings can be found in all infected 
                 programs: 
                 "Death to Separatist" 
                 "C:\COMMAND.COM" 
                 "NuKE PoX V2.1 - Rock Steady" 
                 NPox 2.1 activates on the 13th day of any month, at which 
                 time it will overwrite the system hard disk, rendering it 
                 inaccessible.  It will also occassionally hang the system 
                 when it infects programs. 
                 Origin:  Montreal, Canada  September, 1992. 
       NPox.372: Received in July, 1994, NPox.372 or Lord Zero, is a 372 
                 byte variant of the NPox virus.  It's size in memory is 432 
                 bytes, hooking interrupt 21.  NPox.372 infects .COM files, 
                 including COMMAND.COM, when they are executed.  Infected 
                 files will have a file length increase of 372 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 can be found within the 
                 viral code in all infected programs: 
                 "Swedish Warrior v1.0 by Lord Zer0." 
                 Origin:  Sweden  July, 1994. 
       NPox.630: Received in January, 1996, NPox.630 is a 630 byte 
                 variant of the NPox virus.  It's size in memory is 688 
                 bytes, hooking interrupt 21.  NPox.630 infects .COM files, 
                 including COMMAND.COM, when they are executed.  Infected 
                 files will have a file length increase of 630 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 
                 appear to be altered, though the seconds field will have 
                 been set to "58".  No text strings are visible within the 
                 viral code. 
                 Origin:  Unknown  January, 1996. 
       NPox.1487: Received in January, 1996, this is a 1,487 byte 
                 variant of the NPox virus described above.  Its size in 
                 memory is 1,536 bytes, hooking interrupts 1C, 13, 21, and 
                 22.  Once resident, it infects .COM and .EXE files, 
                 including COMMAND.COM, when they are executed, opened, or 
                 copied.  Infected files will have a file length increase of 
                 1,487 bytes, though this file length increase will be 
                 hidden when the virus is memory resident.  The virus will 
                 be 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. 
       NPox.1726: Received in January, 1996, this is a 1,726 byte 
                 variant of the NPox virus described above.  Its size in 
                 memory is 1,984 bytes, hooking interrupts 1C, 13, 21, and 
                 22.  Once resident, it infects .COM and .EXE files, 
                 including COMMAND.COM, when they are executed, opened, or 
                 copied.  Infected files will have a file length increase of 
                 1,726 bytes, though this file length increase will be 
                 hidden when the virus is memory resident.  The virus will 
                 be 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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