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Thread: Fighting Malware - help is at hand!

  1. #1
    ~BD~ Guest

    Fighting Malware - help is at hand!

    Some great information in the 'Answer' - here:

    http://answers.microsoft.com/en-us/w...e-2a3ade37091c

    --
    Dave - Not really a Microsoft Fan-boi! ;-)

  2. #2
    David_B Guest

    Re: Fighting Malware - help is at hand!

    ~BD~ wrote:
    > Some great information in the 'Answer' - here:
    >
    > http://answers.microsoft.com/en-us/w...e-2a3ade37091c



    Avoid tech support phone scams
    http://www.microsoft.com/security/on...one-scams.aspx

    Its a total scam. Uninstall their software and then run a System Restore
    back to before you installed it.
    Change all your sensitive passwords on all sites - email, bank, credit
    cards and others. (Do not do this
    on the compromized computer and it would be best to do on the phone or
    in-person.)

    You may even want to revert your system back to factory fresh to be sure
    their software is not breaching
    your security. (Means to re-install Windows Clean - removing everything
    on the drive so backup any data
    before hand.)

    ================================================== ==================
    ================================================== ==================

    In USA you can contact FBI, State Attorney General, local law
    enforcement and consumer
    watch groups. Arm yourself with knowledge.

    The Internet Crime Complaint Center (IC3) is a partnership between the
    Federal Bureau of Investigation
    (FBI) and the National White Collar Crime Center (NW3C), funded in part
    by the Bureau of Justice Assistance
    (BJA).
    http://www.ic3.gov/complaint/default.aspx

    No, Microsoft would not call you unsolicited. Nor would they know if any
    errors existed on your
    computer. So those are frauds or scams, to get your money or worse to
    steal your identity.

    Don't fall for Phony Phone Tech Support
    http://blogs.msdn.com/b/securitytips...h-support.aspx

    Avoid scams that use the Microsoft name fraudulently - Microsoft does
    not make unsolicited
    phone calls to help you fix your computer
    http://www.microsoft.com/protect/fra...ng/Msname.aspx

    Hoaxes and Scams
    http://support.microsoft.com/contact...s=support#tab3

    Microsoft Consumer Support Center
    https://consumersecuritysupport.micr...rect=1&gssnb=1

    Microsoft Support
    http://support.microsoft.com/contactus/?ws=support#tab0

    Microsoft - Contact Support
    http://windows.microsoft.com/en-US/w...ontact-support

    ================================================== =========
    ================================================== =========

    Do these thoroughly :

    If you need to check for malware here are my recommendations - these
    will allow you to do
    a thorough check and removal without ending up with a load of spyware
    programs running
    resident which can cause as many issues as the malware and maybe harder
    to detect as the
    cause.

    No one program can be relied upon to detect and remove all malware.
    Added that often easy
    to detect malware is often accompanied by a much harder to detect and
    remove payload. So
    its better to be overly thorough now than to pay the high price later.
    Check with these to an
    extreme overkill point and then run the cleanup only when you are very
    sure the system is clean.

    These can be done in Safe Mode - repeatedly tap F8 as you boot however
    you should also run
    them in regular Windows when you can.

    TDSSKiller.exe. - Download to the Desktop - then go to it and Right
    Click on it - RUN AS ADMIN
    it will show any infections in the report after running - if it will not
    run change the name from
    tdsskiller.exe to tdsskiller.com. Whether it finds anything or not does
    not mean you should not
    check with the other methods below.
    http://support.kaspersky.com/viruses...?qid=208280684

    Download malwarebytes and scan with it, run MRT, and add Prevx to be
    sure it is gone.
    (If Rootkits run UnHackMe)

    Download - SAVE - go to where you put it - Right Click on it - RUN AS ADMIN

    Malwarebytes - free
    http://www.malwarebytes.org/products/malwarebytes_free

    SuperAntiSpyware Portable Scanner - Free
    http://www.superantispyware.com/port...g=SAS_HOMEPAGE

    Run the Microsoft Malicious Removal Tool

    Start - type in Search box -> MRT find at top of list - Right Click on
    it - RUN AS ADMIN.

    You should be getting this tool and its updates via Windows Updates - if
    needed you can
    download it here.

    Download - SAVE - go to where you put it - Right Click on it - RUN AS ADMIN
    (Then run MRT as above.)

    Microsoft Malicious Removal Tool - 32 bit
    http://www.microsoft.com/downloads/d...displaylang=en

    Microsoft Malicious Removal Tool - 64 bit
    http://www.microsoft.com/downloads/d...displaylang=en

    also install Prevx to be sure it is all gone.

    Download - SAVE - go to where you put it - Right Click on it - RUN AS ADMIN

    Prevx - Home - Free - small, fast, exceptional CLOUD protection, works
    with other
    security programs. This is a scanner only, VERY EFFECTIVE, if it finds
    something come back
    here or use Google to see how to remove.
    http://www.prevx.com/ <-- information
    http://info.prevx.com/downloadcsi.asp?prevx=Y <-- download

    PCmag - Prevx - Editor's Choice
    http://www.pcmag.com/article2/0,2817,2346862,00.asp

    Try the trial version of Hitman Pro :

    Hitman Pro is a second opinion scanner, designed to rescue your computer
    from malware
    (viruses, trojans, rootkits, etc.) that have infected your computer
    despite all the security
    measures you have taken (such as anti virus software, firewalls, etc.).
    http://www.surfright.nl/en/hitmanpro

    --------------------------------------------------------

    If needed here are some online free scanners to help

    http://www.eset.com/onlinescan/

    -----------------------------------

    Original version is now replaced by the Microsoft Safety Scanner
    http://onecare.live.com/site/en-us/default.htm

    Microsoft Safety Scanner
    http://www.microsoft.com/security/sc...s/default.aspx

    ----------------------------------

    http://www.kaspersky.com/virusscanner

    Other Free online scans
    http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&s...q=f&oq=&aqi=g1

    --------------------------------------------------------

    After removing any malware :

    Also do these to cleanup general corruption and repair/replace
    damaged/missing
    system files.

    Start - type this in Search Box -> COMMAND find at top and RIGHT
    CLICK - RUN AS ADMIN

    Enter this at the prompt - sfc /scannow

    How to Repair Windows 7 System Files with System File Checker
    http://www.sevenforums.com/tutorials...e-checker.html

    How to analyze the log file entries that the Microsoft Windows Resource
    Checker (SFC.exe) program
    generates in Windows Vista cbs.log
    http://support.microsoft.com/kb/928228

    Also run CheckDisk so we can rule out corruption as much as possible.

    How to Run Disk Check in Windows 7
    http://www.sevenforums.com/tutorials...isk-check.html

    -----------------------------------------------------------------------

    If any Rootkits are found use this thread and other suggestions. (Run
    UnHackMe)

    http://social.answers.microsoft.com/...-54b7e1e7a5a4/

    ======================================

    If needed AFTER you are sure the machine is clean of all malware.

    How to Do a Repair Install to Fix Windows 7
    http://www.sevenforums.com/tutorials...r-install.html

    Hope this helps and Happy Holidays!

    Rob Brown - Microsoft MVP <- profile - Windows Expert - Consumer :
    Bicycle <- Mark Twain said it right.


  3. #3
    Bullwinkle Guest

    why david brooks posts as he does?

    Courtesy of Theodore E. Nash , M.D.
    Theodore Nash sees only a few dozen patients a year in his clinic at the
    National Institutes of Health in Bethesda, Maryland. That's pretty small as
    medical practices go, but what his patients lack in number they make up for
    in the intensity of their symptoms. Some fall into comas. Some are paralyzed
    down one side of their body. Others can't walk a straight line. Still others
    come to Nash partially blind, or with so much fluid in their brain that they
    need shunts implanted to relieve the pressure. Some lose the ability to
    speak; many fall into violent seizures.

    Underneath this panoply of symptoms is the same cause, captured in the MRI
    scans that Nash takes of his patients' brains. Each brain contains one or
    more whitish blobs. You might guess that these are tumors. But Nash knows
    the blobs are not made of the patient's own cells. They are tapeworms.
    Aliens.

    A blob in the brain is not the image most people have when someone mentions
    tapeworms. These parasitic worms are best known in their adult stage, when
    they live in people's intestines and their ribbon-shaped bodies can grow as
    long as 21 feet. But that's just one stage in the animal's life cycle.
    Before they become adults, tapeworms spend time as larvae in large cysts.
    And those cysts can end up in people's brains, causing a disease known as
    neurocysticercosis.

    "Nobody knows exactly how many people there are with it in the United
    States," says Nash, who is the chief of the Gastrointestinal Parasites
    Section at NIH. His best estimate is 1,500 to 2,000. Worldwide, the numbers
    are vastly higher, though estimates on a global scale are even harder to
    make because neurocysticercosis is most common in poor places that lack good
    public-health systems. "Minimally there are 5 million cases of epilepsy from
    neurocysticercosis," Nash says.

    He puts a heavy emphasis on minimally. Even in developed nations, figuring
    out just how many people have the illness is difficult because it is easy to
    mistake the effects of a tapeworm for a variety of brain disorders. The
    clearest proof is the ghostly image of a cyst in a brain scan, along with
    the presence of antibodies against tapeworms.

    The closer scientists look at the epidemiology of the disease, the worse it
    becomes. Nash and other neurocysticercosis experts have been traveling
    through Latin America with CT scanners and blood tests to survey
    populations. In one study in Peru, researchers found 37 percent of people
    showed signs of having been infected at some point. Earlier this spring,
    Nash and colleagues published a review of the scientific literature and
    concluded that somewhere between 11 million and 29 million people have
    neurocysticercosis in Latin America alone. Tapeworms are also common in
    other regions of the world, such as Africa and Asia. "Neurocysticercosis is
    a very important disease worldwide," Nash says.

    Cyst Attack ?

    The alarming illness occurs when tapeworm larvae lose their way. Normally,
    Taenia solium has a life cycle that takes it from pigs to humans and back to
    pigs again. Adult tapeworms, living in the intestines of humans, produce up
    to 50,000 eggs apiece. The eggs are shed in the infected person's feces.
    Pigs swallow these eggs accidentally as they rummage for food on the ground.
    When the parasite eggs reach a pig's stomach, larvae hatch and burrow their
    way into the animal's bloodstream. Eventually they end up lodged in small
    blood vessels, typically in the animal's muscles. There they form cysts and
    wait until their host is eaten by a human. (Pork has to be undercooked for
    the tapeworms to complete their journey.)

    But sometimes tapeworms take a wrong turn. Instead of going into a pig, the
    eggs end up in a human. This can occur if someone shedding tapeworm eggs
    contaminates food that other people then eat. When the egg hatches, the
    confused larva does not develop into an adult in the human's intestines.
    Instead, it acts as it would inside a pig. It burrows into the person's
    bloodstream and gets swept through the body. Often those parasites end up in
    the brain, where they form cysts.

    The tapeworm larvae often get stuck in ventricles, or fluid-filled cavities,
    in the brain, sprouting grapelike extensions. In this way the worm actively
    cloaks itself from immune cells. Protected and well fed, its cysts can
    thrive there for years.

    As a tapeworm cyst grows, it may push against a region of the brain and
    disrupt its function. It may get stuck in a passageway, damming the flow of
    cerebrospinal fluid. This impasse can cause hydrocephalus, or water on the
    brain, along with dangerously high pressure. A resulting brain hernia can
    result in stupor, coma, or death.

    +++
    If a tapeworm cyst doesn't cause big troubles, it may go unnoticed for its
    entire life. Eventually a tapeworm cyst that can't move on to its adult
    stage will die; this signals the host's immune system, eliciting a powerful
    attack and bringing its covert deception to an end. In many cases, the
    immune cells swiftly annihilate the revealed cyst, but often damage occurs.
    The immune system's attack on the cyst can cause the surrounding brain
    tissue to swell with inflammation. For reasons unknown, a calcified cyst can
    keep triggering these immune reactions for years after the parasite's death.

    Although any cyst in a susceptible area of the brain can cause seizures,
    those lodged near regions that issue commands to muscles can trigger violent
    convulsions. One of Nash's patients suffered from tapeworm cysts that
    twisted around his brain stem. After the tapeworms died, the inflammation
    that followed was so severe it put the man in a coma.

    "Thirty or 40 years ago, these patients just died. Surgeons would go in and
    see this mess and couldn't do much," Nash says. Fortunately, the situation
    is improving. Even his comatose patient woke up and, after a few years of
    off-and-on treatment, completely recovered. "Now the guy is doing quite
    well."

    Breaking the Cycle?

    A great step forward came in the mid-1980s when praziquantel, the first drug
    able to kill tapeworm larvae in the brain, became widely available. But
    praziquantel proved too effective. It not only kills tapeworms but also
    triggers an immune reaction that causes brain swelling. "Paradoxically, we
    produce the disease we want to treat," Nash says.

    Over the years Nash and others refined the treatment by combining
    praziquantel with other drugs that tamp down the immune system. It is far
    from a perfect solution, though. Sometimes the immune system still
    overreacts, requiring years of care for seizures and other symptoms. And
    immune-suppressant drugs like steroids have side effects of their own.

    The hunt for better drugs to fight neurocysticercosis is not an easy
    process. The best way to test potential medicines on tapeworms is to get
    living cysts out of infected pigs. Nash and his colleagues recently set up a
    lab in Peru, where infected pigs are abundant, to do just that.

    Although finding a better cure is important, Nash is more interested in
    preventing tapeworms from getting into human brains in the first place by
    breaking their life cycle. A favored strategy is identifying people who have
    adult tapeworms in their bodies and giving them drugs to kill the parasites.
    It is also possible to vaccinate pigs so that they destroy tapeworm eggs as
    soon as they ingest them.

    None of this is rocket science-which makes Nash all the more frustrated that
    so little is being done. "I see this as a disease that can be treated and
    prevented," he says. But there are precious few resources available for
    treatment and little recognition of the problem. "All of this seems to be
    very feasible, but nobody wants to do anything about it."

    http://i.imgur.com/8r2ne.jpg


  4. #4
    Dustin Guest

    Re: Fighting Malware - help is at hand!

    David_B <David_B@nomail.afraid.org> wrote in
    news:jpa9mt$o31$1@dont-email.me:

    > Avoid tech support phone scams


    <snip of technical stuff we know you didn't write and wouldn't be able to
    follow anyway)

    Why did you not give credit to those you copied this from?

    > Rob Brown - Microsoft MVP <- profile - Windows Expert - Consumer :
    > Bicycle <- Mark Twain said it right.


    I see. You have another MVP in your sites.


    --
    Character is doing the right thing when nobody's looking. There are too
    many people who think that the only thing that's right is to get by, and
    the only thing that's wrong is to get caught. - J.C. Watts

  5. #5
    Dustin Guest

    Re: why david brooks posts as he does?

    " Bullwinkle" <.BDTJ@loa..mo> wrote in news:4fb8baeb@news.x-privat.org:

    > tumors. But Nash knows the blobs are not made of the patient's own
    > cells. They are tapeworms. Aliens.


    There was an episode of House with this. The patient had a tapeworm in her
    brain.


    --
    Character is doing the right thing when nobody's looking. There are too
    many people who think that the only thing that's right is to get by, and
    the only thing that's wrong is to get caught. - J.C. Watts

  6. #6
    Virus Guy Guest

    Re: why david brooks posts as he does?

    Bullwinkle wrote:

    (...)

    Who is david brooks?

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