Tuesday, August 18, 2009
Remove Auto Run virus manually Post II
Friday, August 14, 2009
Remove Auto run virus manually Post I
METHOD I
You can easily remove the VB script viruses like MS32DLL.dll.vbs and others which works with the aid of autorun.inf in your harddrive. This virus is mostly transferred via USB pendrive which don’t have any write protect function.
Although i recommend you to use a good virus removal software or script blocker. When you open any of the hard drives may be USB or primary hard disk. You will be directed to this visual basic script which drives yourcomputer crazy. It becomes hard to access your harddrive.
Here’s a way how to disable this script atleast.
As it works with the help of autorun.inf you must be aware to find the autorun.inf file in your hard drive which is read-only and hidden.
NOTE: Remember this script also blocks some of the contents in Folder options . For example, “show the hidden files“.
STEP 1:
Locate the infected drive either C:, D:, E:, F, and so on.
STEP 2:
Now search for the file name autorun.inf using dir command.
” C:/dir autorun.inf (where C, is your drive)”
STEP 3:
I know that, it won’t discover any of the file name autorun.inf as it is the hidden one. Try the following:
” C:/dir/ah (where C is ur drive letter)
Now you can see the files autorun.inf of approx 100+ Kb and MS32DLL.dll.vbs file.
Autorun.inf is the Master and MS32DLL.dll.vbs is a worker. Autorun.inf gives order to work out on the computer. So first you must delete the file named autorun.inf try these codes.
“C:/del/ah/f autorun.inf”
I think the file is now deleted
Now type following commands:
“C:/copy con autorun.inf (Enter)
[AutoRun]
open=explorer.exep(Press F6 button and hit enter)
Now do the same steps for MS32DLL.dll.vbs file as i mentioned in STEP 4
Try to restart the computer
You’ll see the result, if not worked better you use a better virus removable and be prepared for future. If you want to remove this virus first download your usb drives and ur hard drives. Don’t keep any backup.
AND HEY DON’T forget about the program wscript.exe check if it is running or not in you taskmanager. It makes the vbs file work.
Thursday, July 16, 2009
NOD32 crack
Am posting you some free NOD32 serial keys. It works and is useful too. And I am also using this.
Here are few codes:
UserName: EAV-04740302
PassWord: sdwme6f4cb
UserName: EAV-04670657
PassWord: ndntkwa3u5
UserName: EAV-04670886
PassWord: 6xdthbnhk5
UserName: EAV-04208386
PassWord: 3ses5c54sb
UserName: EAV-04206460
PassWord: xn76f2vvsj
UserName: EAV-04670885
PassWord: 2f6jccx2vh
UserName: EAV-04670658
PassWord: b7enk5au5n
UserName: EAV-04739297
PassWord: 8ej5b4eed2
Monday, May 18, 2009
Transcend/Trend Micro to release antivirus USB drive
In order to combat malware and other viruses that travel from computer to computer via flash drives, Transcend will be putting Trend Micro security software on their Jetflash 15 flash drives.
The drives were created specifically to prevent the autorun malware that spreads across corporate systems. Now, this isn’t the full Trend Micro Internet Protection and Anti-Virus software that people have, instead, it runs Trend Micro USB Security which was developed specifically to protect against malicious content in files transferred to a USB flash drive. If threats are discovered, users will be alerted and all infected files will be quarantined. When the JetFlash V15 is plugged into a computer with Internet access, Trend Micro USB Security will automatically download and install the latest security updates directly onto the drive.
No word on how big the drives are, prices, or availability. Transcend doesn’t even list the product yet on their website. You can view the Press Release here.
Chris’s Opinion
Transcend could really be onto something here if they price it correctly. One IT security problem that is often talked about on college campuses is to be careful of which computers you plug your thumb drives into. The reason for this is because everyone uses their computers is different ways–some more safe than others. Plugging your drive in from one computer to the other can spread viruses, malware, adware, etc.
I’ve seen these put onto external hard drives before, but most people use flash drives as opposed to hard drives for ease of portability. It could catch on with users.
Thursday, May 14, 2009
Ways to Save on Anti virus software?
Panda lofts its antivirus protection into the cloud
f the prospect of keeping important data out in the cloud still makes you slightly uneasy, you might get positively lightheaded at the thought of keeping your anti-malware protection up there. But Panda Cloud Antivirus, which entered beta recently, did a decent job of protecting a test system from the bad stuff -- without shoveling our data into the ether, and without slowing our system down.
The latest iteration of Panda uses a crowdsourcing-style concept it's calling "Collective Intelligence" to speed up the process of identifying new threats. The user installs a thin Panda client on the system. Panda scans executables as they attempt to run -- no data files and nothing at rest, unless you specifically run a scan -- and notes the software's behavioral patterns, file traces, and the like. It creates what the company calls a "reverse signature" for each executable -- a partial cryptographic hash, in fact -- and sends it up to the cloud to confirm that the executable is clean.
The analysis and classification happens in the cloud, thus combining behavioral data from all the users (while anonymizing that of individuals) and automatically figures out whether it's seeing some heretofore unknown piece of malware. The "reverse signature" is checked, and the executable is flagged as known-good, known-bad, or not known. Panda reps estimate that the system can nail down a new breed of infection within about six minutes of its first appearance.
Our tests found Panda to be a tidy, well-behaved application that on its initial scan presented us with evidence of a nasty little keylogger that our previous antivirus somehow didn't notice. That initial scan took hours and hours on our Vista machine (with its 2/3-full 160 GB drive and 3 GB RAM). We had to jettison our previous antivirus package, which somehow hurt our feelings less after that festering iteration of TPE Civil War IV turned up, to load Panda. Connecting via proxy server was uneventful, requiring only that we provide the IP address and port in use. (If we'd been running Internet Explorer, Panda says the software could have retrieved that information automatically.)
After loading and that initial scan, though, Panda was utterly unobtrusive, only tapping us on the shoulder when something actually turned up. The software sees viruses, worms, trojans, spyware, adware, dialers, "jokes" (which the company defines as unwanted bits of code that don't seem to have a malicious payload but could confuse your machine into thinking it's infected), and cookies. The reports it provided were easy to parse (and save) and linked back to good information pages on Panda's site.
Sunday, May 10, 2009
Zimbabwe to Receive Anti-flu Drugs
he World Health Organisation began to ship 2.4 million treatments of anti-flu drugs to 72 needy countries Tuesday, and its flu chief said the swine flu epidemic was still spreading.
WHO flu chief Keiji Fukuda said new infections were among the 405 confirmed swine-flu cases reported to WHO in the last 24 hours. “We are seeing testing of specimens that were collected from previous infections and then the laboratory work is catching up to it,” Fukuda said. “But we’re also seeing new infections occurring. So, there’s both of these things going on simultaneously,” he said.
The countries getting Tamiflu included Mexico, Afghanistan, Angola, Bhutan, Bolivia, Eritrea, Haiti, Moldova, Pakistan, Sri Lanka, Uganda and Zimbabwe, among others. The drugs are from a stock of 5 million treatments of Tamiflu that manufacturer Roche Holding AG donated in 2005 and 2006, WHO spokeswoman Fadela Chaib said.
The global body says there are now 1 490 cases and 30 confirmed deaths from the swine flu epidemic. Of those, 822 cases and 29 deaths were in Mexico; the United States had 403 cases and 1 death; Canada had 140 cases, Spain 57, Britain 27, Germany nine, New Zealand six and Italy five. Israel and France had four cases each, Korea and El Salvador had two each, and Austria, Hong Kong, Costa Rica, Colombia, Denmark, Ireland, the Netherlands, Portugal and Switzerland had one case each.
Most of the people infected with the so-called A/H1N1 virus were young people in their mid-20s, Fukuda said, and most had been travelling to Mexico, the hardest-hit country. “With influenza, oftentimes we see the infections go to younger people first and then go to older people later,” Fukuda said.
Another reason could be that older people already have some kind of protection against the virus from previous infections, he added. Fukuda said patients who recover from the new swine flu virus would likely gain some immunity to future outbreaks, if only for a few years. “With influenza viruses, when you are infected it provides some protection against future influenza viruses similar to the one which infected you,” he said.
The protection lasts “a couple of years and then the viruses themselves change enough so that it’s kind of a new virus for your body, so you are susceptible again.”