[comp.virus] Steroid Trojan and SAM 2.0

D1660@AppleLink.Apple.COM (SoftPlus, Paul Cozza,PRT) (06/06/90)

For SAM 2.0 users:

As recently reported, a new Trojan horse named Steroid has recently
been discovered. It is set to go off on July 1st, 1990, at which time
it zeroes your volume directories (it is possible to recover files on
hard disks with utilities such as SUM II). Before that time the Trojan
remains dormant.

This Trojan is shipped with the file name (Steroid) preceded by 2
invisible characters along with a warning not to change the file name.
These 2 invisible characters are there to make it load before SAM (or
other INITs). If you leave this file in your system folder, then you
are in danger (especially if have not renamed it).

If you have renamed the file so that it runs after SAM (in general, NO
unknown INITs should ever be allowed to run before SAM), then in
advanced or custom modes you will get SAM alerts saying "There is an
attempt to bypass the file system" when this Trojan attacks your
volumes. Denying these attempts prevents the Trojan from doing any
damage.

You can enter the following virus definition in Virus Clinic to allow
both SAM Intercept and Virus Clinic to detect this Trojan during
scans.

   Virus Name:  Steroid Trojan
Resource Type:  INIT
  Resource ID:  148
Resource Size:  1080
Search String:  ADE9 343C 000A 4EFA FFF2 4A78    (hexadecimal)
String Offset:  96

If you have entered this definition and have renamed the Trojan to run
after SAM, then SAM Intercept will also notify you when this INIT is
run at startup time.

Paul Cozza
SAM Author