
Quote from Joab:
It amazes me that these software companies can get away with this !!!!
I see no difference in this then trespassing on private property and the fact that we know the source is the antivirus company it links too is a smoking gun imo...
Something really needs to be done
I found literally thousands of others online that had similar bugs
In my experience, this is no longer accurate. Approx 2 years ago, I reformatted my HD and reloaded the op sys. In my hurry to get functional again, I didn't reload my virus software but made a mental note to open no attachments and do no surfing in the interim.Quote from bigmrfrank:
It most likely got on your computer via something you downloaded. A free computer checkup, freeware, porn ... you name it.
Quote from RL8093:
In my experience, this is no longer accurate. Approx 2 years ago, I reformatted my HD and reloaded the op sys. In my hurry to get functional again, I didn't reload my virus software but made a mental note to open no attachments and do no surfing in the interim.
During the 2-3 days I was unprotected, some scum program found my system and infested it. It would not allow me to access either the microsoft web site nor the mcafee site. I thought I was losing my mind. If it typed in the url, I was taken to an obviously fabricated site that needed my username & password before allowing 'further access'.
I ended up reformatting the HD and reloading windows again (while unplugged from internet). I plugged in the internet and quickly downloaded microsoft updates and then mcafee. Approx 1-3 times per day for the next few weeks, either the firewall or virusscan intercepted some scum program trying to get in.
Currently my son's computer is infected w/ a program that will not allow him to access a disc drive when he attempts to reload windows.
Pretty amazing what human ingenuity can conjure up when properly motivated .....![]()
R
I don't know about "almost instantly someone went to work actively hacking". I suspect that whoever had made it inside previously kept trying to get back in again. I also do not know what is likely or not, I am stating what actually happened.Quote from bigmrfrank:
So you reloaded your OS and almost instantly someone went to work actively hacking so they could put some crap on your computer? That's not likely.
Thank you for the recommendation. This situation occurred several years ago and I now have multiple layers of security...Quote from silver914:
A simple hardware firewall will prevent this. Buy a router.
Quote from RL8093:
I don't know about "almost instantly someone went to work actively hacking". I suspect that whoever had made it inside previously kept trying to get back in again. I also do not know what is likely or not, I am stating what actually happened.
My point in making my previous post was to alert people who still think that they must open an attachment to get infected, that their thought processes are outdated.
Thank you for the recommendation. This situation occurred several years ago and I now have multiple layers of security...
R
Not at all. It has been shown that if you install eg. a year-old version of XP and you connect it to the net with open ports, so no firewall, it will be infected before you can even download all patches and upgrades to prevent the infection in the first place.Quote from bigmrfrank:
So you reloaded your OS and almost instantly someone went to work actively hacking so they could put some crap on your computer? That's not likely.