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Virus:Boot/Stoned.Monkey

Classification

Category:

Malware

Type:

Virus

Aliases:

  • Virus:Boot/Stoned.Monkey
  • Stoned.Monkey

Summary

The Stoned.Monkey virus was first discovered in Edmonton, Canada, in the year 1991. The virus spread quickly to USA, Australia and UK. Monkey is one of the most common boot sector viruses.

Removal

Technical Details

As the name indicates, Monkey is a distant relative of Stoned. Its technical properties make it quite a remarkable virus, however. The virus infects the Master Boot Records of hard disks and the DOS boot records of diskettes, just like Stoned. Monkey spreads only through diskettes.

Monkey does not let the original partition table remain in its proper place in the Master Boot Record, as Stoned does. Instead it moves the whole Master Boot Record to the hard disk's third sector, and replaces it with its own code. The hard disk is inaccesible after a diskette boot, since the operating system cannot find valid partition data in the Master Boot Record - attempts to use the hard disk result in the DOS error message "Invalid drive specification".

When the computer is booted from the hard disk, the virus is executed first, and the hard disk can thereafter be used normally. The virus is not, therefore, easily noticeable, unless the computer is booted from a diskette.

The fact that Monkey encrypts the Master Boot Record besides relocating it on the disk makes the virus still more difficult to remove. The changes to the Master Boot Record cannot be detected while the virus is active, since it rerouts the BIOS-level disk calls through its own code. Upon inspection, the hard disk seems to be in its original shape.

It is difficult to spot the virus, since it does not activate in any way. A one-kilobyte reduction in DOS memory is the only obvious sign of its presence. The memory can be checked with, for instance, DOS's CHKDSK and MEM programs. However, even if MEM reports that the computer has 639 kilobytes of basic memory instead of the more common 640 kilobytes, it does not necessarily mean that the computer is infected. In many computers, the BIOS allocates one kilobyte of basic memory for its own use.

The Monkey virus is quite compatible with different diskette types. It carries a table containing data for the most common diskettes. Using this table, the virus is able to move a diskette's original boot record and a part of its own code to a safe area on the diskette. Monkey does not recognize 2.88 megabyte ED diskettes, however, and partly overwrites their File Allocation Tables.

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