Boot virus shipped on laptops

muckshifter

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Aged malware installed on batch of Vista systems.

A consignment of laptops from German manufacturer Medion, sold through German and Danish branches of giant retail chain Aldi, have been found to be infected with the boot sector virus 'Stoned.Angelina', first seen as long ago as 1994 and last included on the official WildList in 2001.

According to German sources, anywhere between 10,000 and 100,000 systems may be infected, but as the machines apparently ship without floppy drives the virus is unlikely to spread. The systems come pre-installed with Windows Vista and Bullguard anti-virus, which will warn of the 'harmless' infection on booting the machines, but is unable to remove it.

Bullguard has provided a special removal tool to remove the offending code, but the incident has highlighted the vulnerability of newer security products to older threats thought long extinct. Some products may even have removed modules designed do deal with boot sector viruses and other elderly threats to improve performance.

'This is a reminder that old viruses never really die,' said (e-mail address removed), Technical Consultant at Virus Bulletin. 'Malware that's been off the radar for years often pops up when least expected, after someone digs out an old floppy or boots up an ancient system, and security firms have a duty to maintain protection against older threats for just this kind of eventuality. It should also remind product makers of the need for thorough security processes and screening before releasing products to market - in this case the only real harm has been to the manufacturer's reputation, but shipping infected goods can have much more serious consequences.'

A report on the incident from heise security (in German) is here, with an announcement from Medion (also in German) here. Removal instructions from Bullguard are here.


http://www.virusbtn.com/news


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Ian

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Ouch, now that is a silly mistake :eek: Especially as it notifies people on boot!
 

muckshifter

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It’s worth noting that ...


a) virtually no PCs ship with floppies these days, making infection of other PCs highly unlikely.

and b) the fact that an antivirus program can’t remove an ancient boot sector virus such as this one is open to debate.

The virus itself isn’t destructive. And in Windows XP and Vista, you would have to have a floppy in the drive while the system is booting in order to get infected. In a way, it's more of a novelty to see such an old virus (which is no longer even on the Wildlist).

However, the point is that if you’re infected, you would want to clean it, and a number of notebooks shipped from Medion with this virus. BullGuard, the antivirus product included with the notebook, was initially unable to remove it, although the company has an update on its website which should do the job.


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