Posted on 03/23/2002 2:29:28 PM PST by rwfromkansas
Okay, I am about ready to throw something at my PC. I got a virus off of an e-mail even though I did not open an attachment and quite frankly, am close to losing it.
Whenever I start the computer, the virus, w32.klez.e@mm, takes up all my space on teh C drive and screws my memory over, embedding itself in the C/Windows/Sytem folder. I can't even download virus software to fix the problem. I am EXTREMELY frustrated. I can't even start my e-mail because I don't have enough memory!!!!
I do not have any anti-virus software because we had some old software on here but we could not update it. They wanted money for every update and we just decided the heck with virus software since it is money-grubbing anyway. But, now I am in a serious bind. I did not even know you could get a virus from previewing a message.
I have looked at removal instructions at symantec, but am not able to do that since I need to download their software to remove the virus. i have wasted about 80 bucks in teh last six hours attempting to download software that has only failed due to the virus screwing me over.
I need some help here, if anyone can do so.
I guess otherwise, I am stuck with this thing and it will never go away.
It's not terribly difficult to make these types of programming mistakes which open code to attack. Even worse, all it takes is ONE byte getting copied outside a buffer to possibly open a program to such an exploit. These off-by-one errors are pretty common.
To compound the problem, Microsoft has historically (hysterically?) been very lax in securing their programs against such attacks. Microsoft has 90% or better of the marketshare, historically lax security, and people hate them. The best way not to get hacked is to use as few of their programs as possible.
Good Luck!
I use Outlook, and the other MS products (confession - I love 'em).
I keep PC-cillan updated, but I have a feeling you may tell me PC-cillan can't detect something like this because it is not an attachment...
When I have had my morning coffee, I will check out the Trend website and find out what I can.
The only good news is the only software the stuff deletes is anything that has to do with anti-virus software. Unless it is on an the 6 of an odd-numbered month, in which it screws up every software program on your computer.
The other good news is that this virus is not smart enough to infect both my C and D hard drive partitions....so if only this patch software would let me download it to the D drive instead of forcing it to the C drive, I will be fine....
Friend was telling me that XP is very susceptable to hackers. Anybody have any believeable info on this?
I may live to regret it, but I don't keep anti-virus software running. Some anti-virus packages perform so poorly that they are almost like having a virus.
Instead, I don't read email with Outlook, disable all Active-X, Java, & javascript on all but a few trusted pages, disabled file sharing, and deleted Microsoft Scripting Host -- and I regularly back-up files I can't afford to lose. My computer runs much faster without Antivirus software running all the time.
1. Select a new, larger, faster hard drive
2. Remove your old hard drive from the system.
3. Install your new hard drive, in it's place, make it the 'active' drive, and then format the drive, and then install minimal software, eg, windows only, or what ever.
4. Buy and install a good anti-virus - I use McAffee, it seems to be more compliant than Norton.
5. Once that is done, install your old hard drive as a slave 2nd drive. (note - this may get somewhat tricky, depending on whether you use the same cable or another port and another cable - and you may have to change jumper settings) None of this is hard to do, but should not be taken lightly.
6. Run the anti-virus on your old drive
7. Pull your important data files off the old hard drive, and onto the new hard drive.
8. Format your old hard drive to kill all virus stuff and ALL files, period, on your old hard drive, just in case. (if you don't know how, learn, as it is important if you are going to stay with computers)
9. Leave all your hard drives in place, and keep all important your data on a separate hard drive (which ever you decide should be a secondary drive) so that in the future, if you need to format your hard drive, your important data will be on a separate drive.
This is not really hard to do, but it would be easier if you had a 'guru' friend, who knows how, and who would step you through it the first time. EG, go to a computer club, if you don't have a 'guru friend'.
That's what happened. The title of the post was 'Are You Stupid?' and my *maroon* hubby opened it! LOL! I have the data from our hard drive saved on CDs, I deleted Win98 and Office2000 and reinstalled. But, Outlook Express still isn't working correctly. I get an error that says OE could not be started because MSOE.DLL could not be loaded. I don't know what to do to fix it. Do you know???
I'll tell him about the Free Agent news reader. And if I don't get OE to work, he can use Eudora for his email. I use Outlook and we like to use different email programs.
Good lesson in keeping AV up to date and keeping up with patches. I think even JohnRob would agree that this rule applies to ALL OS's and software. Right John?? :-)
Are you in the Beta? - You finding it to be pretty nifty?
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