Windows XP Service Startup issue |
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chopper
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: July 13 2005 Location: Essex, UK Status: Offline Points: 20030 |
Topic: Windows XP Service Startup issue Posted: May 29 2010 at 17:35 |
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OK, I seem to be all sorted now. Turned out I had a virus called TDSS. With the help of Dr Web, which cleared a process from memory and a few other nasties as well, and a program called TDSSKiller.exe all my services now start okay so hopefully my web searches won't get diverted either.
Thanks for your help everyone. |
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chopper
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: July 13 2005 Location: Essex, UK Status: Offline Points: 20030 |
Posted: May 29 2010 at 06:05 | |||
Check out a freeware program called SpeedFan. I had a problem with my PC shutting down on it's own. Turned out to be overheating, SpeedFan will tell you the temperature of your CPU and hard disk. If the CPU is running hot then dust on the fan is a likely cause. It certainly was on mine. |
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chopper
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: July 13 2005 Location: Essex, UK Status: Offline Points: 20030 |
Posted: May 29 2010 at 06:03 | |||
Exactly. I too have Firefox with AdBlock but it hasn't stopped me picking up something untoward. |
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A Person
Forum Senior Member Joined: November 10 2008 Location: __ Status: Offline Points: 65760 |
Posted: May 28 2010 at 22:16 | |||
My computer was slowing way down, but it turned out there was a dust bunny in the fan on my video card, it's sped up considerably since then.
Edited by A Person - May 28 2010 at 22:16 |
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VanderGraafKommandöh
Prog Reviewer Joined: July 04 2005 Location: Malaria Status: Offline Points: 89372 |
Posted: May 28 2010 at 22:09 | |||
Damn, I might have one without realising it then... or would it be obvious if I did?
However, I use Firefox with AdBlock + and I am usually very careful. Of course, that doesn't mean I could not still get one, of course. Edited by James - May 28 2010 at 22:09 |
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Falx
Forum Senior Member Joined: May 05 2010 Location: New Zealand Status: Offline Points: 859 |
Posted: May 28 2010 at 20:03 | |||
Rootkits are way over HijackThis's head, they normally live in c:\windows\system32\drivers and are loaded while the OS is booting. The only way to get rid of them is to pull the hard disk and scan it in another computer, or boot off a live CD (e.g. ERD Commander) and remove the file yourself, if you know where it is. =F= |
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"You must go beyond the limit of the limit of your limits!" - Mr. Doctor
"It is our duty as men and women to proceed as though the limits of our abilities do not exist." - Pierre Teilhard de Chardin |
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Falx
Forum Senior Member Joined: May 05 2010 Location: New Zealand Status: Offline Points: 859 |
Posted: May 28 2010 at 20:00 | |||
If Bill Gates is the Emperor, then Steve Jobs is Darth Vader |
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"You must go beyond the limit of the limit of your limits!" - Mr. Doctor
"It is our duty as men and women to proceed as though the limits of our abilities do not exist." - Pierre Teilhard de Chardin |
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chopper
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: July 13 2005 Location: Essex, UK Status: Offline Points: 20030 |
Posted: May 28 2010 at 17:46 | |||
Running Dr Web now, it's found another bit of the TDSS virus I thought I'd cleared.
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VanderGraafKommandöh
Prog Reviewer Joined: July 04 2005 Location: Malaria Status: Offline Points: 89372 |
Posted: May 28 2010 at 14:10 | |||
Have you got a HijackThis log? I'm not sure if RootKits will show up on there though.
I often use CCleaner to clear my Registry. Of course, that won't really help your situation but it's a useful bit of software. |
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Slartibartfast
Collaborator Honorary Collaborator / In Memoriam Joined: April 29 2006 Location: Atlantais Status: Offline Points: 29630 |
Posted: May 28 2010 at 12:08 | |||
Bill Gates is evil and must be destroyed.
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Released date are often when it it impacted you but recorded dates are when it really happened...
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Epignosis
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: December 30 2007 Location: Raeford, NC Status: Offline Points: 32524 |
Posted: May 28 2010 at 10:09 | |||
I'm just really stubborn, I guess. |
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Dean
Special Collaborator Retired Admin and Amateur Layabout Joined: May 13 2007 Location: Europe Status: Offline Points: 37575 |
Posted: May 28 2010 at 09:59 | |||
You've been okay for 7 months, you're probably safe.
I have to admit that for an Admin looking after a dozen desktop PC's three days and ten programs is far to time consuming for me - it takes me a hour to reinstall XP and Office and another hour to restore any data files from backups - I could ghost them, but that's impractical. If the user has lost anything, it's not my problem - they should have backed it up. (yeah, I'm Mr Hard Nose)
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What?
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Epignosis
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: December 30 2007 Location: Raeford, NC Status: Offline Points: 32524 |
Posted: May 28 2010 at 09:45 | |||
You may be right Dean, but I've not had a single problem since November. Granted it took three days, ten different programs, and screwing around in the registry among other things. Assuming there is still a rootkit problem somewhere on my hard drive, what would cause it to "return in force?" |
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Dean
Special Collaborator Retired Admin and Amateur Layabout Joined: May 13 2007 Location: Europe Status: Offline Points: 37575 |
Posted: May 28 2010 at 09:35 | |||
stop!
This is what rootkits do! You are definitely infected and anything you send or recieve is suspect. The reasonn it shows on Themes and DHCP is because it patches itself into whatever is in your boot sequence (msconfig ->startup) - those fail because the patch failed, but other processes were patched and didn't fail,which is why your search is being redirected.
I don't trust av software to 100% remove a rootkit - most just remove the symptoms, which will return again sometime in the future - the only guaranteed safe recovery is reformat your harddrive and reinstall XP.
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What?
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chopper
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: July 13 2005 Location: Essex, UK Status: Offline Points: 20030 |
Posted: May 28 2010 at 08:52 | |||
Thanks for the advise everyone. I'm going to try Dr Web at least (speed isn't really an issue, I'll just leave it running overnight if I have to). Something else is also redirecting some of my web searches to another search engine so I need to get rid of that as well.
Quite why anyone thinks this is going to benefit them I don't know. If I want to go to a site for a reason and they divert elsewhere, I'm not going to think "Oh ok, I'll have a look here instead". Just off will you.
Rant over.
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Falx
Forum Senior Member Joined: May 05 2010 Location: New Zealand Status: Offline Points: 859 |
Posted: May 28 2010 at 07:33 | |||
Doctor Web just takes forever because it's slow, its detection rate isn't that great¹. But it's useful to have, and is the only effective way of removing the Mebroot trojan (nasty lil' bugger) I've found. ¹ http://www.virus.gr/portal/en/content/2009-08%2C-10-august-05-september =F= Edited by Falx - May 28 2010 at 07:41 |
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"You must go beyond the limit of the limit of your limits!" - Mr. Doctor
"It is our duty as men and women to proceed as though the limits of our abilities do not exist." - Pierre Teilhard de Chardin |
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Epignosis
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: December 30 2007 Location: Raeford, NC Status: Offline Points: 32524 |
Posted: May 28 2010 at 07:28 | |||
I'm pretty sure that was drweb-cureit. No guarantees of course, but this one and Malwarebytes Anti-malware proved to be the most effective. |
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chopper
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: July 13 2005 Location: Essex, UK Status: Offline Points: 20030 |
Posted: May 28 2010 at 07:23 | |||
Thanks, I've just read that thread, you mentioned "I ran a program that took over seven hours just to scan both drives, and it caught myriad things I wouldn't have thought of" - what program was that?
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Falx
Forum Senior Member Joined: May 05 2010 Location: New Zealand Status: Offline Points: 859 |
Posted: May 28 2010 at 07:22 | |||
Or you pay someone like me to fix it... I removed a pretty nice rootkit from one computer this week, AVG Free (!) was the only antivirus that picked it up =F= |
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"You must go beyond the limit of the limit of your limits!" - Mr. Doctor
"It is our duty as men and women to proceed as though the limits of our abilities do not exist." - Pierre Teilhard de Chardin |
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chopper
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: July 13 2005 Location: Essex, UK Status: Offline Points: 20030 |
Posted: May 28 2010 at 07:16 | |||
Thanks for breaking it to me gently Dean. and thanks to the others for the advice.
I've removed some more malware but still have the problem. Don't think I'll go for the system restore at the moment as it's an inconvenience rather than a major problem. I'm wondering why a rootkit type virus would want to take over my Themes service. DHCP I can maybe understand.
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