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| ClamWin will not start on XP |
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GuitarBob
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Try scans with Microsoft Security Essentials and Malwarebytes' Antimalware. Both are free and are about as good as you can get for AV/Antimalware. Then try an online scan from Nod32. If you are rooted, it may be the TDSS/Alluron thinge--Kaspersky has a free up-to-date tool for it, and you will recall that there were some problems with the last Microsoft patch on XPs when they were infected by the TDSS rootkit. As a last resort, get the F-Secure Linux rescue boot CD--download and burn to CD as an ISO file. Then update with a USB and do a scan. It scans under Linux, so Windows viruses can't hide.
Good luck. Regards, |
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t0m
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I ran MB Antimalware tool, and it detected and deleted a rootkiit, Trojan.Sasfix, Trojan.Witkinat, Backdoor.Bot, etc.
I'm not sure where all of these came from, and when I got them. Perhaps it only activated with the reboot. Now that I have deleted this ClamWin will now start up and run again. Interesting that ClamWin was disabled just when I really needed it. Now that I have positively identified an infection, what else should I do? Are Antimalware and ClamWin enough? Should I run one of the off-line tools (like a Linux boot disk)? What else on my LAN might have gotten infected? |
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GuitarBob
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I am glad you were able to "fix" things. It sounded to me like you had some malware. I didn't know you were using ClamWin on a LAN. It's too bad you could not have given the Clam people a sample of the malware so they could get signatures for it. It may still be in Malwarebytes' quarantine, but it's best left there or deleted (better yet).
There is some very efficient malware around. If it is new, most AVs cannot detect it--they need to have samples from which to prepare signatures for their databases. That's why we need to send our AV provider any undetected malware and keep our AVs updated. The virus writers have "services" where they upload their malware to see which AVs can detect it. They then change it a little to escape detection. Most likely, the stuff you got was fairly new. Also, when an undetected virus gets on a computer, it frequently enables others to infect it also. ClamWin is an on-demand scanner (not real-time) and is best used as a backup to a more powerful antivirus--especially if you have a network or surf the web a lot. Home users could use Clamwin with the free Clam Sentinel front end and the free Threatfire behavior blocker for good protection. Malwarebytes is sometimes better at finding embedded malware than at preventing it. Microsoft's free Security Essentials is a good standalone AV, but Alwill's free Avast provides more complete protection, including a web filter. if you have anything other than a home network with just a couple of computers, however, you should use a commercial antivirus suite for complete protection on all computers. The commercial version of either of the two AVs mentioned above will provide good, business-class protection. Regards, |
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| ClamWin will not start on XP |
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