genus3041 Posted February 6, 2004 Posted February 6, 2004 Ok I went to http://www.singingfool.com to watch some music videos, a little box appeared and I clicked yes without thinking before I new it there were 5 new icons on my desktop and I couldn’t delete them with add or remove programs, so I targeted there root files and deleted them manually, then the weirdest thing happened, this internet explorer page appeared in the background of my desktop that I couldn’t get rid of, I tried ending it in task manager but my computer froze, so I updated Norton anti-virus and scanned my Hard drive, it came up clean. I installed spybot search and destroy and updated it, it too came up clean. So I tried going into the registry and finding the files but I couldn’t find anything that matched what they looked like. I really don’t want to reformat my drive so I hope you can help I took a screen shot of the “background virus” heres a link: http://www.geocities.com/genus3041/backvirus.jpg Thanks, -Eric Quote
FPCH Admin AWS Posted February 6, 2004 FPCH Admin Posted February 6, 2004 If it changed your background then head into your display settings and change the background. Also download HiJackThis and scan your computer. Post the log here. This checks for any malware that may be running. Download and run CWShredder to fix anything that might have been installed by CoolWebSearch. It sounds like this is what happened. Also might want to download AdAware. Quote Off Topic Forum - Unlike the Rest
Nippoo Posted February 7, 2004 Posted February 7, 2004 It is possible that it did not change the backgrond, but in fact it is a legitimate, if not a bit annoying, program which just put an Active Desktop item on your desktop to deliver advertising. Quote
excaliber Posted February 8, 2004 Posted February 8, 2004 Also, get Spybot: Search and Destroy. Free spyware detection program. Quote -Zach "It's a flat file masquerading as a relational engine. The Fischer-Price of DBMS." - Concerning mySQL "What's the single most stupidest OS feature? -The User"
GavinO Posted February 8, 2004 Posted February 8, 2004 There really is no legitimate advertising system that alters active desktop settings without user consent - active desktop can do really nasty things to a system, and always impacts performance. Quote -The Gavster Three students died that year at the academy; one was executed, one was killed in a training accident, and one died of natural causes, for a knife to back will naturally kill anyone. -RA Salvatore Like to IRC? Try http://irc.randomirc.com
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