| Common name | AGI-Plan | 
|---|---|
| Technical name | Month 2-4 | 
| Aliases | Month 2-4, Agiplan | 
| Family | Zero Bug | 
| Classification | Virus | 
| Type | DOS | 
| Subtype | COM file, destructive | 
| Isolation | Unknown | 
| Point of isolation | Mülheim an der Ruhr, Germany | 
| Point of origin | Unknown | 
| Author(s) | Unknown | 
AGI-Plan was a memory resident DOS file infector first isolated at the Agiplan software company in Germany. Because of CARO standards that dictate that viruses should not be named after companies, AGI-Plan's technical name is Month 4–6. This name also violates CARO standards, but a more minor rule involving syntax. AGI-Plan is related to the Zero Bug virus, as both it and AGI-Plan prepend 1,536 bytes to files they infect.
AGI-Plan is not initially damaging until several months after the initial infection, hence its name. After activation, AGI-Plan will begin to corrupt write operations, which results in slow, difficult-to-notice damage over time.[1]
AGI-Plan is notable for reappearing in South Africa in what appeared to be an intentional re-release several years after. AGI-Plan never succeeded in spreading significantly beyond the isolated incidents in Germany and South Africa.
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