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7 Wishes wrote:Any IT geeks out there? I'm totally hosed. My entire music collection has been wiped out by a malware/virus (MS Antispyware) my son accidentally downloaded while playing a racing game on my other computer. And, yes, I'm an idiot - I didn't have them backed up (except in my E drive, which is also infected). Is there any way to salvage those files? Any help would be appreciated.
G.I.Jim wrote:Are you sure it's plugged in?Sorry Dan...just had to mess with you! I hope you get it up and running. Computers suck sometimes! I think they should start putting these virus/hacking fuckers away for 5-10 years each time they catch them for pulling this crap! They've probably cost this country billions of dollars over the years with this bullshit. There's your sollution to the economy...start taking out these bastards...problem solved!
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I'm awaiting my government orders to start this mission!
G.I.Jim wrote:I think they should start putting these virus/hacking fuckers away for 5-10 years each time they catch them for pulling this crap! They've probably cost this country billions of dollars over the years with this bullshit. There's your sollution to the economy...start taking out these bastards...problem solved!![]()
I'm awaiting my government orders to start this mission!
Behshad wrote:What you want to do first of course is get 2-3 anti-virus programs ( AVG and AVIRA work great and both are free). Run the programs and let them do their job and get you virus free first. Ddont worry about backing stuff up as it may cause more problems down the road. Keep in mind that an mp3 file can not get infected.
Once the whole system is reset and virus free, you may have to look for a Undelete program to obtain your music collection back. (These programs are rather pricey but I will hook you up if you need any of them).
7 Wishes wrote:Thanks to everyone so far...I'll probably take up everyone on their offers for help.
T-Bone, one question: how would I disconnect the hard drive and connect it to the other PC? Would it be via a USB connection or would I set it up as a slave drive on the other system?
Thanks again, everyone!
D
walkslikealady wrote:Behshad wrote:What you want to do first of course is get 2-3 anti-virus programs ( AVG and AVIRA work great and both are free). Run the programs and let them do their job and get you virus free first. Ddont worry about backing stuff up as it may cause more problems down the road. Keep in mind that an mp3 file can not get infected.
Once the whole system is reset and virus free, you may have to look for a Undelete program to obtain your music collection back. (These programs are rather pricey but I will hook you up if you need any of them).
Is it good to run more than one antivirus or firewall program at a time? My computer gives me the warning that it could cause instability/problems. Truth or is it Microsoft just trying to make you use their stuff?
I've got a firewall and antivirus and my computer still locked up one day and I seem to have lost everything except the original factory settings.
Truth...I'd love to throw computer out of the window!
walkslikealady wrote:Behshad wrote:What you want to do first of course is get 2-3 anti-virus programs ( AVG and AVIRA work great and both are free). Run the programs and let them do their job and get you virus free first. Ddont worry about backing stuff up as it may cause more problems down the road. Keep in mind that an mp3 file can not get infected.
Once the whole system is reset and virus free, you may have to look for a Undelete program to obtain your music collection back. (These programs are rather pricey but I will hook you up if you need any of them).
Is it good to run more than one antivirus or firewall program at a time? My computer gives me the warning that it could cause instability/problems. Truth or is it Microsoft just trying to make you use their stuff?
I've got a firewall and antivirus and my computer still locked up one day and I seem to have lost everything except the original factory settings.
Truth...I'd love to throw computer out of the window!
Voyager wrote:Here's what I would do:
1. Remove the hard drive from the computer.
2. Put the hard drive in a another computer (as a slave drive) or buy a USB external hard drive adapter to put the drive in and connect it to another computer.
3. Backup all of your personal files to the hard drive on the other computer (they should be virus-free - viruses usually only attack operating system files).
4. Put the hard drive back into the computer.
5. Run your recovery disk on the computer and restore it to its factory state.
6. Load your music files back onto the computer via a network cable or an external hard disk.
The worst thing you could do is panic and reformat the infected hard drive. I wouldn't do anything until you get your personal files backed up off of it.
Computers that are infected with trojan viruses (which sounds like what you are dealing with) will usually never be the same, even if you think you have removed the virus. You should always reformat your hard drive and reinstall your operating system after a trojan infection (once you have backed up your files).
You may also want to run a virus check after you restore your personal files, just to make sure you didn't backup anything that was affected by the virus.
Behshad wrote:stevew2 wrote:Good luck, that happened to me when i downloaded some porn, i had to crash the computor and start all over again
didjooo riiieealliyyy?
7 Wishes wrote:Dudes - thanks for the help! I connected the hard drive with the virus issue to my other computer, and made it the slave drive. However, I cannot get the functioning computer to recognize that it's been connected. What should I do next?
7 Wishes wrote:Apparently, I'm an even bigger idiot than you may have already assumed.
The uninfected computer is a Dell 4700 (the virus-laden one is a 2400). I'm not accustomed to the layout in the F12 function on the 4700. What exactly do I have to do? Sorry to be a pain in the ass.
Gunbot wrote:Rick wrote:7 Wishes wrote:Apparently, I'm an even bigger idiot than you may have already assumed.
The uninfected computer is a Dell 4700 (the virus-laden one is a 2400). I'm not accustomed to the layout in the F12 function on the 4700. What exactly do I have to do? Sorry to be a pain in the ass.
On the back of the hard drives, next to where the ribbon cable attaches, there 4 sets of 2 pins. Click here to see a picture. One of those two pinned sets will have a jumper on it. If you look either on the bottom or top of the hard drive, it will give you a picture of those pins and which two pins should have to jumper to either make it "Cable Select" (CS) "Master" (MA) or "Slave" (SL). The hard drive that runs the computer should be jumpered as Master, and the second drive as Slave. You can set bot to CS, but I get mixed results with that one, so I always use the Master/Slave configuration. If you get those set correctly, the computer should recognize it.
I think he is asking what to do once he is in the bios screen.
7 Wishes wrote:OK! It recognizes that there IS a new hard drive. However, it cannot seem to read it. When I click on "My Computer", under "Other" it reads "Local Disk (E)" but there is a question mark next to that icon. If I click on it, it says the Disk Drive in E is not formatted. Should I click on "yes" or not? Thanks!!!!
7 Wishes wrote:OK! It recognizes that there IS a new hard drive. However, it cannot seem to read it. When I click on "My Computer", under "Other" it reads "Local Disk (E)" but there is a question mark next to that icon. If I click on it, it says the Disk Drive in E is not formatted. Should I click on "yes" or not? Thanks!!!!
T-Bone wrote:There's also a possibility that the virus erased your partition, thus rendering ANY formatting useless. Your files are still there, but they are floating in space
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