German PC vendor
Medion gave
some of its customers an unwanted blast from the past when it shipped laptops
loaded with a 13 year-old virus.
The Medion systems contained a boot virus known as Stoned.Angelina. The virus
stores itself in the DOS boot sector of floppy disks and in the master boot
record on hard disks.
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The company said in a notice on its Danish website that the infected machines
had been sold through
Aldi retail
stores in the country.
Medion did not say that the affected machines were limited to Denmark, but
none of Medion's other international sites bears the notice.
Security vendor
Symantec
said that there is little security risk from the virus, which was discovered in
1994.
The virus is designed to do nothing more than attempt to spread and
replicate. However,
F-Secure
noted that an edit made to the DOS boot sector by the virus could possibly
damage floppy disks.
Most antivirus applications will detect and eliminate the threat. Medion
recommended that customers clean up their systems by reinstalling the operating
system from the recovery CD included with the system.
Viruses occasionally find their way onto devices during the manufacturing
process. Dozens of iPods were infected via a computer at
a manufacturing plant last October, and
McDonald's
had to recall 10,000 infected MP3 players in the same
month.
Stoned.Angelina found its way into a
Seagate
manufacturing plant in 1995 and infected a batch of 850MB IDE hard drives.
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