Eleven 09:16 PM 05-10-2010
I think my son has this now, /tagging this thread for reference
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Blueface 07:07 AM 05-11-2010
Man, I feel for you guys with this nonsense.
I got so tired of getting viruses and crashing.
Haven't had an issue now in over two years.
Don't want to mention what I know for sure I owe it to as it will start a debate.
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wayner123 08:05 AM 05-11-2010
I hate to say this, but if you got one of the new TDL4 or TDSS rootkits, go ahead and reformat your hard drive. There are ways to check if you have this. Malewarebytes, bleepingcomputer and kaspersky all have great forums to help out with the problem.
The new version of the TDSS rootkits are unable to be removed or quarantined. No software company has come up with a solution yet. I had this problem a few weeks ago now and got the newest tdl4 version of the rootkit. After many days and hours of research I ran across some hacking websites. They were discussing these new rootkits and how they act. To sum it up, when the guys who get paid to hack can't figure out "how" the rootkit is even reacting, it's time to re-format.
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BC-Axeman 08:14 AM 05-11-2010
Nobody in this thread has had a rootkit to deal with yet, I think, but there is a guy at work with one. It takes over shortly after turning the computer on and won't let you do anything administrative. You would have to boot the computer to a separate disk and work on it. He just uses the computer offline.
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I got that file one day at work, re-formatted my drive and re-installed Windows. Not pretty. Then about
4 months later I got it again. It is a pretty smart deal. Only advantage you have is most of your data is
easily saved. You can make backups all day. As long as you don't go online, it kinda stays quiet. Then
once you are done making all your backup DVDs, you can format your hard drive, lol.
Or take the good advice given here above. Wish I had read that before.
Did a total wipe twice in one year.
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Jack Straw 08:40 AM 05-11-2010
I got something like that a few weeks ago, I was able to get my antivirus to actually kill it by ending all processes on the task manager that didn't look normal, and then running my antivirus/ad-aware. Been fine since. If I ran the antivirus stuff without stopping the processes it would delete what I suspect were subsidiary virus files but not the main file that would recreate the subsidiaries every time the software deleted/quarantined them.
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