Posted on 01/16/2015 9:24:42 AM PST by knarf
Does an uninstalled walware REALLY uninstall the threat ?
I persisted to ignore the popup but eventually gave in ... I had to restart and ...then it occurred to me
IF malware is installed, and (forgive my adolescent understanding of things) the guy outside in a van is watching my net play and/or snatching my data ...
and then I realize ... wait a minute ... THAT was a stupid thing for me to do ...
If I uninstall what I fear is a phisher, does the guy in the van say, "shit" .. and drive over to the next block to attack my friend ?
Or am I screwed because once he's got it, he's got it ?
I use Norton
Restarting your computer may have locked the malware in.
Run CCleaner. If something’s there, it’ll find it and take care of it.
It appeared to leave.
Just to be sure, I did a Restore point anyway.
Or you could also recover to a back up from a couple days ago.
It depends on the kind of malware.
There are a some relatively innocuous ad-ware programs that you can uninstall in the normal manner, but that is the minority. Most malware you will not be able to uninstall with the regular procedure, and even if you could uninstall it, they usually come packaged with viruses and trojans that can reinstall the software automatically.
There is no one scanner that will catch everything nowadays, so I would never recommend people to just do a single scan.
>Run CCleaner. If somethings there, itll find it and take care of it.
Nope!
True, which is why I then said to recover from a backup to be sure. I use CCleaner and Microsoft Security Essentials for my machine.
Any time I experience something that might have gotten past my standard AV software, I got to http://housecall.trendmicro.com/ and run their house call program.
Trend Micro’s Housecall is an exceptionally good fix for all sorts of malware and adware.
http://www.malwarebytes.org
Ok, forget what I wrote.
Those are the two "nags" that really get people into trouble.
Microsoft
Malicious Software Removal Tool
http://www.microsoft.com/en-us/download/malicious-software-removal-tool-details.aspx
It depends, some uninstall fairly clean, most don’t. Of course you have Norton which is probably worse than most malwares. Of course Flash did do a big update recently, so that might not have even been malware, but that does open up the whole discussion on Flash being an unstable resource hog.
run CCleaner, Avast anti-virus(free home version) AND MalwareBytes.com(also free home version)
You need to scan with all 3 - CCleaner alone is not enough
I write computer software AND surf the web for a living- those three (and using your head) will keep you safe
If you want to pull the little scumware b*tch out by the roots, this is where you start.
Be advised, this is not an "instant" fix, they are volunteers and you'll have to invest some time and have patience, (usually a couple of days was my experience ).
It's free and they're good at what they do.
Here's a link on how to get started.
Depends on what “uninstall” means to you. A piece of malware may be removed from the executable startup list, but that alone doesn’t mean the malware itself has been erased completely from the HDD. It may also be partially “uninstalled” in that some processes of the malware no longer start, but some others continue to start in the background and eat up memory. Also malware usually changes the registry in one or more ways and those effects usually linger until they are manually cleaned up.
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