Hi.
Many thanks for the prompt reply, but I'm gutted about the solution involved!
I'll obviously follow your guidance and reformat my hard disk and reload everything again. What a pain!
You're welcome and aye indeed not good news but I would never post such advice lightly unless I deem the situation warrants it I assure you.
Will there be a danger that the virus files may be on my back-up hard drive already or that I may copy them across when doing a back-up before reformatting?
In my experience they should not be but to err on the side of caution we can check as follows...
Now if your backup drive is a external one as in uses a USB connection, download the following and plug your drive in when prompted:-
- Please download Flash_Disinfector and save it to your desktop.
- Double click to run it.
- You will be prompted to plug in your flash drive. Plug it in. <-- This will be your external Hard-Drive
- Flash_Disinfector will start disinfecting your flash and hard drives. This takes a few seconds. Your desktop will disappear in the meantime.
- When done, a message box will appear. Click OK. Your desktop should now appear. If it doesn't, press Ctrl + Shift + Esc to open Task Manager.
- Click on File > New Task (Run...). Type in explorer.exe and press Enter. Your desktop should now appear.
Note: Flash_Disinfector will create a hidden folder named autorun.inf in each partition and every USB drive plugged in when you ran it. Don't delete this folder...it will help protect your drives from future infection
Next:
Now if your backup drive is either a external or internal one the following still applies...
Check for updates with both the installed Anti-Virus software and Malwarebytes' Anti-Malware. Then right click on the drive icon for the backup drive and scan with each of the aforementioned in turn.
Did the logs indicate just when the trojan got into my PC?
Unfortunately I am unable to determine such at this time, as to how your machine became infected could be due to a myriad of reasons and speculating about such would not be professional of myself to be perfectly honest. Just bare in mind for the future keep your machine updated via:-
Microsoft releases patches for Windows and other products regularly:
And this
forum topic has a wealth of very good advise...
The following advice of my own is worth baring in mind also. I recommend one of the following freeware Anti-Virus applications to use/install:-
Be careful when opening attachments and downloading files:
Never open email attachments, not even if they are from someone you know. If you need to open them, scan them with your antivirus program before opening.
Never open emails from unknown senders.
Beware of emails that warn about viruses that are spreading, especially those from antivirus vendors. These email addresses can be easily spoofed. Check the antivirus vendor websites to be sure.
Be careful of what you download. Only download files from known sources. Also, avoid cracked programs. If you need a particular program that costs too much for you, try finding free alternatives on
Sourceforge or
Pricelessware.
Stop malicious scripts:
Windows by default allow scripts (which is VBScript and JavaScript) to run and some of these scripts are malicious. Use
Noscript by Symantec or
Script Defender by AnalogX to handle these scripts.
Avoid Peer to Peer software:
P2P may be a great way to get lots of seemingly freeware, but it is a great way to get infected as well. There's no way to tell if the file being shared is infected. Worse still, some worms spread via P2P networks, infecting you as well. My advice is avoid these types of software applications.
Hosts File:
A Hosts file is like a phone book. You look up someone's name in the phone book before calling him/her. Similarly, your computer will look up the website's IP address before you can view the website.
Hosts file will replace your current Hosts file with another one containing well-known advertisement sites, spyware sites and other bad sites. This new Hosts file will protect you by re-directing these bad sites to 127.0.0.1.
Here are some Hosts files:
Only use one of the above!
Install WinPatrol:
WinPatrol alerts you about possible system hijacks, malware attacks and critical changes made to your computer without your permission.
Download it from
here.
You can find information about how WinPatrol works
here.
Next:
This is a very helpful/useful set of advice from Microsoft:
Microsoft Safety & Security Center
Any further questions? Feel free to ask, if not stay safe!