Re: OT: ARRRGHHHH




"Top" <top@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:7o80etF3ml4a9U5@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
In article <m0gth55i48mi9sqejdiufk9c5m56nb09m7@xxxxxxx>,
ubehappy2day@xxxxxxxxx says...

On Tue, 08 Dec 2009 12:04:46 -0500, Happy <ubehappy2day@xxxxxxxxx>
wrote:

Was merrily browsing the net yesterday when, inspite of having a
decent firewall/anti-virus/anti-spyware protection I got hit by the
insidious Enterprise Security malware - ARRRGHHHH!!! Spent most of
afternoon, evening getting rid of it, fixing my registry, doing a
system restore (restored the Sunday's Checkpoint) had to do this in a
certain order before the system would allow a restore. This bugger
deletes task manager out your registry making it non-functioning
(therefore making it more difficult to delete the running malware
process), deletes key files out of your av/as software - not only
disabling it but also making it extremely difficult to delete,
identifies itself to Windows as the av/as software, attempts to hide
its directory and make the files read-only - been a long time since I
used the command prompt and attrib commands. And of distributes its
files to several different places (thanks Windows - I remember good
old DOS days where a program was in ONE place).

I was in a mood anyway and was d e t e r m i n e d to fix this without
doing a whole laptop recovery and reload - hey, I'm lying here anyway.
So I'm pattin' myself on the back.

I'm just glad I didn't fall for their trickery - their poor use of
English "Save Now only 60%" for the Lifetime subsciption - gave them
away and pay for the program to guaranteed to remove the 20 critical
trojan horse viruses that their scan falsely reported.

Bunch of alf;'o237$%^&1!!!

Happy

This is a veerrryyy strange coincidence - maybe you techie/sleuthy
guys can clue me in...after yesterday's little hit...

This afternoon I get a call an accented fellow says he's calling in
response to my computer problem. Because I've called noone, I say
"What computer problem". He says, "Your virus". Other than here, and
you all don't know my phone number, I say "What virus"? he says,"Your
Dell rep asked me to call"? I use a Sony so I say "You were
misinformed" He says "Well, hopefully your computer is infected..." I
cut him off and say, incredulously "HOPEFULLY my computer is
infected"?????? He says"Can I do a free scan" and I say "No." he
hangs up.

Caller ID say melvin (all lowercase) (209) 642-xxxx which I called
back and asked for the company name. Melvin answered and before
answering the question wanted to know who was calling. I said I just
wanted to know his company name. He replied "something (I couldn't get
because of his accent" technical support" I asked where he gets his
clients. He says "the white pages" , which, is suppose, is
technically accurate...

So is yesterday and this phone call related? How could it NOT be? Oh
well, I'm only out some time at this point and senses are
heightened...

Happy

I agree that the 2 incidents seem related. If I get a call like that the
first thing I say
is goodbye. I don't go any further because even yes or no is more
information than I'm going
to give.

One thing I've done is buy a magicjack phone adapter to connect to my
computer. True if your
computer is down so is the phone but I use my cellphone for most of my
calling any way. I
don't take calls from anyone I don't know on my cell. I got a call
yesterday from someone
that said he was sending me $120 in free gas coupons. His wording was to
make me think he
was from my credit card company but now that I think of it I don't
remember is he said he
actually worked for them or not but he did know the last 4 digits on the
credit card. He
started telling me he was sending some additional offers along with the
freebies. Soon as he
said that I stopped him and told him I don't take ANY solicitations on my
cell, thank you
goodbye. As I hit the call end he was still talking. Point of this
rambling is that I do not
hesitate to end a call. I try to be somewhat polite but just because they
are talking
doesn't mean I have to listen.

Top


This is the year they start really coming out of the woodwork ''SO''
watch your butt! or pay the price :( enforcement of any type is a paid for
job and getting it right now is funny and getting more by the minute...you
can believe that all the way to your empty bank account!

Just don't chance or trust it if your gut tells you anything period for
the next hmmm say 3 years, maybe longer, knock on wood...



.



Relevant Pages

  • Re: OT: ARRRGHHHH
    ... insidious Enterprise Security malware - ARRRGHHHH!!! ... system restore had to do this in a ... certain order before the system would allow a restore. ... deletes task manager out your registry making it non-functioning ...
    (alt.support.chronic-pain)
  • Re: OT: ARRRGHHHH
    ... insidious Enterprise Security malware - ARRRGHHHH!!! ... system restore had to do this in a ... certain order before the system would allow a restore. ... deletes task manager out your registry making it non-functioning ...
    (alt.support.chronic-pain)
  • Re: OT: ARRRGHHHH
    ... insidious Enterprise Security malware - ARRRGHHHH!!! ... system restore had to do this in a ... certain order before the system would allow a restore. ... deletes task manager out your registry making it non-functioning ...
    (alt.support.chronic-pain)
  • Re: ARRRGHHHH
    ... insidious Enterprise Security malware - ARRRGHHHH!!! ... system restore had to do this in a ... certain order before the system would allow a restore. ... deletes task manager out your registry making it non-functioning ...
    (alt.support.chronic-pain)
  • Re: Help! At wits end with Cannot find the hive file error
    ... It is corrupt, absent, or not writable. ... previous restore point, still same error. ... In terms of corrupting your registry, it could be, that during ... It relies on the copies in System Restore, ...
    (microsoft.public.windowsxp.hardware)