Posted on 10/16/2009 7:14:08 AM PDT by knittnmom
Attack forces user to purchase phony antivirus package to free computer
(Excerpt) Read more at darkreading.com ...
I never click on ANYTHING unless I know exactly what it is. Creature of habit, dislike of change, ebay shopper. And I never open things I didn’t personally download.
Since this morning I am unable to play videos, music or anything.
Open task manager and stop this processes. TotalSecurity 2009.exe, tsc.exe, Sc2C21UvvM.exe.
Delete following files. Winsource.dll, tsc.exe Sc2C21UvvM.exe winsource.dll TSC.lnk Help.lnk Registration.lnk Uninstall TSC.lnk and also delete the directory at C:\Program Files\TSC.
Remove registry entries of this files. To do this open registry editor and press F3.Then search for tsc.exe. Delete all the entries of that file from registry. Now search for TotalSecurity and Total Security and delete those entries too.
Also look for winsource.dll file in registry and delete related entries from registry.
get Root !
This has been my saving grace more than a few times. Have your drive partitioned into at least 2 drives. Put your Ghost images on to D:drive. You are protected to the extent you keep your images up to date.
Thanks!
I cannot vouch for that, I just came across it. The site seems legit, and I guess it can’t hurt if you remove only the things it stipulates. See if it works.
Perfect. Thanks.
My daughter, unfortunately, DID click...and the virus totaled the system.
In the end, I had to reformat and do a clean install. NOT good!
ouch. My laptop did not come with a restore disc... I need to make one... or two
I’ve had my system infected by similar ‘rogueware’ programs in the past. It throws up a fake ‘You’ve been infected’ message and prompts you to go to a website to download the program to remove it. Some of the newer ones will cripple your system preventing you from using your antivirus or antispyware software.
What most people aren’t aware of is that you can reboot your system into ‘Safe mode’ and in this mode the rogueware in almost 99% of the cases can’t cripple your system. I then use Malwarebyte’s AntiMalware software. You can download it for free and it has always found and gotten rid of all these rogue programs.
I’ve seen those steps posted as well, but I urge extreme caution. Please, please be very wary of anything that instructs you go edit your registry. Even if this is a completely innocent attempt to help out, unless you are very skilled with computers and have experience with editing a registry, don’t take this approach. All it takes is one simple entry being accidentally erased in the registry to completely ‘brick’ a system. Once that’s done, it’s almost impossible to restore it. I’m a software engineer, I know this from experience.
The advice I’ve always given is go download MalwareByte’s AntiMalware software. It’s free (there is also a payed option, but I’ve never needed it) to download and update, and it has always located and completely removed any rogueware I’ve had on my systems or on other systems I’ve helped fix.
The ideal situation is to just have your OS and program files on C: drive. If you have a crash or virus, you still have your "stuff" on another drive.
Instead of messing around with regedit and uninstalling and re installing for hours with all the reboots and headache, just get Norton Ghost. Been there, got the T shirt.
How much is Ghost Drive?
I could burn all the important stuff on DVD’s couldn’t I?
The smaller stuff could be put onto a flash drive? Mine is only 4GB.
This was no pop-up window.
It looked like my computer and not something from the internet. Thats what was new about it. I’m glad I didn’t click it.
Norton Ghost will save an image of your whole drive into a file that you need to put somewhere else. If your computer only has one drive, you can partition it into 2 drives( or more) and save the image to the other partition. If you have the money, just buy a second drive and install it as a slave drive. What that does is it assures you that if drive C is damaged and won't even format, then you still have your image. If you have a DVD burner, you can burn the image file to DVD's. If your Image is under 4.35 GigaBytes, it may fit on just one disk. You can also put the image on a thumbdrive if it is large enough to hold it. WalMart recently had 20 Gig dives for $20. They are much cheaper on Ebay but you can get one today if needed. I have several drives for myself, but that is just me. I have several Ghost images in various places for different reasons. I convert home movies, save movies, and music, and have large files when needed. If I had spent several hours and even days working on converting home movies and then stored it on C: drive and the caught one of these viruses, I would be very disappointed and may have to vent with my .45 Colt.
I can’t afford anything right now. Its just going to have to not get infected for a while. =o)
Thank you. But I am a Mac person, so I think I am not threatened by this particular menace. You might want to post this to the others on here who thanked me.
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