I use Avari anti virus, windows own firewall, and malwarebytes for the malware. I also have spywareblaster which so long as you check for updates every week, then enable them, its like a vaccination, and doesnt interfere with your other programmes. I havnt had any virus or malware since I started using this combo! (I did use zone alarm firewall but after reformatting recently just clicked on the windows one for now. until I make my mind up)
The thing that makes me feel better about this is that browsers are more and more being installed in their own sandboxes, though I tend to be somewhat of a software purist and dislike the trend of a single point of failure like a browser to do everything like open documents and pdf's, etc.
That same malware killed my computer more than a few months ago. I went out and bought a Mac.
I can open my old computer in safe mode to copy the files, but otherwise I've just abandoned it. Fortunately I was considering a new computer at the time anyway, so it wasn't a huge loss.
Kaspersky said I had some malware, but they are not a threat now. I do not understand why starting in safe mode once fixed my problems, but everything seems good for now.
Ranb
Can you tell me what your son did? If I open in safe mode, I can't install anything to fix the problem and if I just boot up, the I have no control over the computer.
This makes me chuckle because I'll probably have to get my son to fix my PC also.
It was malwarebytes, and it worked a treat. Good luck. He didn't use safe mode, but I don't know what difference it makes either way.
I tried safe mode yesterday and it did not start up. I downloaded TDSSKiller and extracted it today, but it failed to open.
I tried safe mode again today and it worked. Updating Kaspersky now.![]()
Ranb
You might want to download malwarebytes and give it a scan too. No anti virus program is 100% reliable in detecting all threats, I'd give it a scan with another program just to be on the safe side.
If Kasperskey found the malware and cleaned it, it was most likely due to your OS being booted up in Safe Mode. All Safe Mode really does is allow Windows to start with only a minimum amount of the usual resources it uses. If a computer is infected, then Safe Mode usually lets you get into Windows without "waking up" the malware like it normally would. Since it's not actively running in safe mode, your anti virus program would then probably have a much better chance of cleaning the inactive files.
Glad to hear it's working now though! Hopefully it's all taken care of.
OK, that's what my computer does. If you boot it up it goes straight to the malware screen and no commands work.It depends on the malware infection. Some are designed start up every time you log on to Windows and run in the background. By doing that, the nastier ones might be able to prevent you from taking steps to get rid of it (not letting you run a program like Malwarebytes, for example). That's when Safe Mode might come in handy.
Hey Ginger, is your infected computer running Windows? What version is it?
It might be easy to recover the data and then reinstall the OS, then you have two machines.
OK, that's what my computer does. If you boot it up it goes straight to the malware screen and no commands work.
In safe mode I can find and copy files. I haven't tried to open any programs except Word. So how would I install a program to a flash drive and enable the program to clean my computer?
It might be easy to recover the data and then reinstall the OS, then you have two machines.
I agree , run another scanner to be sure, and back up your data to an outside source. Rootkits are very hard to scan away.
Will just deleting the files if I find them be sufficient to remove them?