[Infowarrior] - Windows Vista attacked by 13-year-old virus

Richard Forno rforno at infowarrior.org
Mon Sep 17 13:21:28 UTC 2007


Vista attacked by 13-year-old virus
http://www.theregister.co.uk/2007/09/17/vista_hit_by_stoned_angelina/

By Kelly Fiveash → More by this author
Published Monday 17th September 2007 11:22 GMT

A batch of laptops pre-installed with Windows Vista Home Premium was found
to have been infected with a 13-year-old boot sector virus.

Those of you with a long memory will vividly recall the year 1994: Nirvana's
lead singer Kurt Cobain died, South Africa held its first multi-racial
elections, and Tony Blair became leader of the Labour party. Oh, and
Microsoft's operating system was the quaint, pre-NT Windows for Workgroups.

But it was a year that also saw the arrival of a boot sector computer virus
known as Stoned.Angelina which moved the original master boot record to
cylinder 0, head 0, sector 9.

It would appear that this teenage virus has not yet been consigned to the
history books.

According to Virus Bulletin, the consignment of infected Medion laptops –
which could number anything up to 100,000 shipments – had been sold in
Danish and German branches of retail giant Aldi.

The computers had been loaded with Microsoft's latest operating system Vista
and Bullguard's anti-virus software, which failed to detect and remove the
malware.

Although the infection itself is harmless, Stoned.Angelina will undoubtedly
have left Microsoft and Bullguard execs blushing with embarrassment about
the apparent flaws in their software which allowed an ancient virus to slip
through the back door.

On its website Bullguard offered some reassurance to Medion customers hit by
the virus:

"Stoned.Angelina is a low-risk boot virus that infects the MBR (Master Boot
Record) of hard disks. This is a very old virus. Apart from its ability to
spread from computer to computer, it carries no payload (damage) to the
systems it infects."

It added that the virus commonly spreads by being booted from an infected
floppy disk, and causes no damage to the operating system.

Virus Bulletin technical consultant John Hawes said: "This is a reminder
that old viruses never really die.

"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." ®




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