FileFront Forums

FileFront Forums (http://forums.filefront.com/)
-   Jedi Academy General Yib-Yab (Off Topic) (http://forums.filefront.com/jedi-academy-general-discussion-1009/)
-   -   Hmm (http://forums.filefront.com/jedi-academy-general-discussion/396986-hmm.html)

dyyor April 12th, 2009 06:18 PM

Hmm
 
ok, interesting little developement

apperantly i just got a trojon alert while on jk3files >.>

and spybot keeps coming up with system change permissions

is jk3 havin issues?

Mikouen April 12th, 2009 06:25 PM

Re: Hmm
 
It's the adverts. With Ziff Davis out of the picture now, FileFront can't use the old advertising agency, so they've had to find a new service.

I'd say it's teething troubles, but it's actually that the new ad service is complete and utter shite.

NAB622 April 12th, 2009 07:05 PM

Re: Hmm
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by dyyor (Post 4861761)
ok, interesting little developement

apperantly i just got a trojon alert while on jk3files >.>

and spybot keeps coming up with system change permissions

Sounds like you got infected. Blast that out of your computer before you end up like me.

avast! - Download antivirus software for spyware and virus protection

Also, use FireFox with the Adblock and Noscript plugins and that will not happen any more. :cool:

Raz0r April 13th, 2009 02:24 AM

Re: Hmm
 
I'm using the very latest Norton 360, FireFox with AdBlock and Noscript plugins, yet last night my computer came up with about 40 trojans and infections trying to load themselves on one after the other after being on here.
Norton managed to stop them getting on and removed them, but they didn't stop coming back on until i shut down and booted up again.

>_>'...

NAB622 April 13th, 2009 03:42 AM

Re: Hmm
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by -=*Ráz0r*=- (Post 4861860)
I'm using the very latest Norton 360

I believe that would be part of the trouble. I've heard horrible things about 360.

Raz0r April 13th, 2009 05:05 AM

Re: Hmm
 
Well I'm planning on rebuilding entirely tomorrow - you recommend that other program mentioned above?

NAB622 April 13th, 2009 09:35 AM

Re: Hmm
 
I would highly recommend Avast. It's the best antivirus protection I've ever seen, paid programs included.

If you're a real security buff, you can even go as far as to get one of these firewalls on top of that:

Free Firewall Antivirus Software Download by Comodo (Asks you everything about EVERYTHING on your computer)

ZoneAlarm by Check Point - Award winning PC Protection, Antivirus, Firewall, Anti-Spyware, Identity Protection, and much more.

I remember Kouen saying at one point that ZoneAlarm is over protective...Comodo's even more so. But it puts you in the driver's seat where you belong, so it's a nice program for me.

Jedi_Mediator April 15th, 2009 04:30 AM

Re: Hmm
 
Malwarebytes.org - One of the three programs that helped me get my computer back on its feet just recently. It has a very good reputation.

A guide and tutorial on using ComboFix - A heavy-duty, autonomous removal program that almost guarantees successful removal of all the infected files it finds. It can take a little while to run, but usually no more than half an hour at a time.

Trend Micro HijackThis - Free software downloads and reviews - CNET Download.com - Scans your computer for infected files and generates a logfile that you can share with knowledgeable folks. Also, through the logfile you should be able to use the program to delete the less stubborn infections on your computer. Includes lots of other handy features, too.

NAB622 April 15th, 2009 05:05 AM

Re: Hmm
 
I've seen MalwareBytes go to work, too...it isn't a resident scanner, though, is it?

Mikouen April 15th, 2009 05:07 AM

Re: Hmm
 
Technically, neither is Avast. :p

NAB622 April 15th, 2009 05:11 AM

Re: Hmm
 
Erm...yeah it is...

http://www.storage.nab622.com/nab622/avast_scanning.PNG

Haven't you ever seen avast kill viruses before they finish downloading?

Mikouen April 15th, 2009 05:20 AM

Re: Hmm
 
Keyword: "resident"

We both know that while Avast has a brilliant on-access scanner, it's resident scanner couldn't find a trojan horse on an otherwise-empty 4gb hard drive unless you ran a boot-time scan.

Still, if one gets a resident virus while Avast is running in the first place, it's almost exclusively due to their own stupidity since Avast blocks any and all uncontrollable threats. (Yeah, I'm talkin' to all you folks who use keygens and cracks. Seriously, if you gonna use that crap, at least run it on a VPC!)

NAB622 April 15th, 2009 09:08 AM

Re: Hmm
 
Ok, now you have completely spun my head in circles three times over and turned it upside down and inside out. What in the world are you saying...? XD

Would that be because I edited this post after you replied? http://forums.filefront.com/sw-jk3-r...ml#post4864076

Mikouen April 15th, 2009 09:53 AM

Re: Hmm
 
Nope. I'm saying that Avast can prevent infections, but it's not very good at curing them.

Think of it more as a vaccine.

Jedi_Mediator April 15th, 2009 12:48 PM

Re: Hmm
 
Combofix is a great cure. :) It managed to delete several instances of Trojan Vundo on its own, while Norton 2006 and HijackThis could not.

NAB622 April 15th, 2009 01:45 PM

Re: Hmm
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Mikouen (Post 4864301)
Nope. I'm saying that Avast can prevent infections, but it's not very good at curing them.

Think of it more as a vaccine.

You...do realize just how impractical it is for an antivirus program to actively scan your entire computer while you're using it, right? No antivirus program will do that for you. There's a screen saver scanner for that very purpose.


Quote:

Originally Posted by Jedi_Mediator (Post 4864395)
Combofix is a great cure. :) It managed to delete several instances of Trojan Vundo on its own, while Norton 2006 and HijackThis could not.

Anything is better than Trend Micro products. I can present proof of that. And Norton's just huge...of all the paid programs, though, it's the only one that has a decent database. I say 'decent' because it still isn't great.


I think anyone who will pay for personal virus protection is crazy. It takes days or even weeks before an outbreak of a clever virus can be caught and a cure made for it, and by then it's too late because a few million computers are already rooted. So you basically pay for people to tell you you're safe, but really, your computer is silently doing someone else's dirty work on the internet. And some people *cough cough* get the short end of the stick when that happens.

NAB622 April 15th, 2009 09:48 PM

Re: Hmm
 
Yeah so that first part came out rather insulting...sorry about that, was in a hurry.

Apparently I'm confusing resident protection with something else...I know you know about scanning and how it works, Kouen, so please don't take what I said as an insult. I'm missing something bigtime in terminology, and it's causing major confusion on my end.

iZero April 16th, 2009 01:29 AM

Re: Hmm
 
Personally I use AVG Free, kills most viruses but if there is one motherbitch I tend to use uh.... Spybot- Search and Destroy or whatever it is, it even tells you what Virus it is and what it effects in your computer.

This sounds like it's going to infect your Temp Internet files- Use CCleaner, it can wipe anything and can even fix regestry issues.

Mikouen April 16th, 2009 05:27 AM

Re: Hmm
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by NAB622 (Post 4864862)
Apparently I'm confusing resident protection with something else...

That actually happens an awful lot, usually because the professionals start throwing around inappropriate words to make their crap sound better than it actually is.

Point is, Avast is really more of a prevention measure. To perform a scan with it, your only option is boot-time scans if you want it to do it's job. Although perhap's thats for the best in any case, given that 90% of scanners that run background scans couldn't find a virus in a folder full of keygens. Silly plonkers, they are.

NAB622 April 16th, 2009 12:12 PM

Re: Hmm
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Mikouen (Post 4865049)
That actually happens an awful lot, usually because the professionals start throwing around inappropriate words to make their crap sound better than it actually is.

Yup, that would explain my confusion. Figures. It's just like HDD companies that decided it was smart to give you a literal MB instead of a computer MB...


All times are GMT -7.

Powered by vBulletin®
Copyright ©2000 - 2016, vBulletin Solutions, Inc.
SEO by vBSEO 3.6.0 ©2011, Crawlability, Inc.