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Date: | Fri, 23 Jul 2010 12:10:12 +1000 |
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Don wrote:
>I have been scanning the computer all day
>with AVG, Superantispyware and Malwarebytes in normal mode and also in safe
>mode and these programs seem to be incapable of removing this infection.>>
Many of these nasties these days simply self-replicate as they are deleted.
If they are in the system before your security software is updated, they
generally will protect themselves from removal. You can scan away till the
cows come home, but it won't do you any good.
The simplest way to defeat these things is to remove the hard drive from
your computer, insert it into a known clean computer, and run Avira and
Malwarebytes scans from there.
The second computer will simply see your "dirty" hard dive as an additional
drive in My Computer, but as nothing from your drive is booting at startup,
nothing on it will be active. In this way, you are effectively defeating
any protection such malware may possess.
Of course, this supposes that you have a 2nd clean computer available to
you which already has the appropriate security software installed and
updated. And if you happen to own a laptop, this procedure won't generally
be possible without additional tools.
This is, in principle, much the same as Bob Wright's excellent suggestion
of running your scans from a boot disk.
If the system is too badly infected, a reformat may be the only practical
answer. I've seen some classes of virus which can replace vital Windows
files with their own versions. When you remove the virus, you also remove
these system files which will leave you with an unbootable computer.
Don Penlington
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