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-------------------------------------------------------------- This story was printed from ZDNet Australia. --------------------------------------------------------------
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Does your malfunctioning PC have a virus? By Faithe Wempen, TechRepublic October 29, 2002 URL: http://www.zdnet.com.au/insight/soa/Does-your-malfunctioning-PC-have-a-virus-/0,139023731,120269466,00.htm
Today's PC viruses, Trojan horses, worms, and blended threats can cause run-of-the-mill Windows or application problems, out-of-memory errors, intermittent failures to fully start up, or installation or operation problems with applications.
But these symptoms could also be caused by your typical hardware or software malfunction, making diagnosing the problem a bit tricky. Here are some suggestions for determining if a PC has a virus.
Types of infections
Another type would travel from PC to PC via floppy disk, hidden in the boot sector, and when a PC was booted from an infected floppy, the virus would copy itself to the boot sector of that PC. These viruses still exist but are nowhere near as common as the newer varieties. Some people would argue that the newer ones are not really -viruses" per se, because they lack some of the defining characteristics of viruses, such as the ability to attach themselves to a program file or infect the system area of a disk. Some of the common virus types out there today (and permit me to use the loose, generic definition of virus in this article) include the following:
Most of the viruses circulating at this writing are blended threats, so they don't neatly fall into any one category. This also makes them more dangerous, easier to spread, and more difficult to eradicate.
You probably have a virus if...
Tip It's much easier to spot double-extension files if the display of extensions for known file types in Windows is turned on. To do that, choose Tools, Folder Options, and deselect the Hide Extensions For Known File Types check box on the View tab.
You might have a virus if…
The key to distinguishing virus-related system problems from ordinary ones is often situational. What did the user do right before the problem started? It never hurts to ask. If possible, check the user’s e-mail box to see whether an e-mail containing a virus might still be hanging around there. Check his or her Deleted Items, and check the Sent Items folder as well to see if the virus may have been spread to others. For definitive virus detection, you must turn to an antivirus program with updated definitions. If a reputable antivirus program will install, run, and complete a check successfully, and if its definitions have been updated within the last 24 hours, you can be fairly confident that the problem is not a virus. Otherwise, virus infection is still a credible suspect. Are the definitions up to date? Most antivirus programs can’t detect viruses that they don’t know about. There are exceptions, such as programs that monitor the file sizes and dates of essential system files and warn you if they are about to be changed. However, the vast majority of threats circulating today are not true viruses because they do not actively infect your existing .exe files or boot sector. Instead, they are Trojan horses, back door programs, or worms, whose behaviors won't normally trigger that kind of proactive detection. Therefore, updated definition files are your only reliable line of defense against new virus threats. Norton AntiVirus, for example, checks for new definitions on the company’s server and installs them automatically. Be warned, however, that some services (such as Symantec’s Live Update) update their servers only once a week except during peak periods of virus problems, so you might not always get the latest updates by running Live Update. Going manually to the company’s Web site and comparing the date of the most recently posted definitions to the date shown in your software is one way to ensure you have the latest stuff, but that can be a little taxing. Symantec offers an Intelligent Updater service that updates virus definitions every business day, which is a great alternative for administrators with mission-critical PCs to support. Tip If you think you might have a W32.Klez.mm virus or a variant thereof, you’ll need to download and run a special Klez removal tool. Symantec offers a free one on its Security Response Web site, where you can also view a list of removal tools for many other specific viruses. Do a full system scan Assuming your virus definitions are up to date, you can be reasonably certain that if an antivirus program successfully completes a full system scan and tells you there is no virus, there probably is no virus. If you remain skeptical, check one of the major virus security Web sites after 24 hours; it’s possible that a brand-new variant has slipped in. If that's the case, other people should be reporting it and it should be all over the virus community’s news within 24 hours. If your antivirus program won’t run or won’t do a full system scan, or if you buy a new copy and it won’t install, this is a significant sign there is a virus infection. For example, many varieties of the W32.Klez.mm mass-mailing worm include commands that disable your antivirus software and make it difficult or impossible to install new antivirus software. Unfortunately, there’s no simple magic formula for determining whether a virus is the source of PC problems. Many virus symptoms are identical to the symptoms of normal system problems. The guidelines above, however, can help you make an educated guess. TechRepublic is the online community and information resource for all IT professionals, from support staff to executives. We offer in-depth technical articles written for IT professionals by IT professionals. In addition to articles on everything from Windows to e-mail to fire walls, we offer IT industry analysis, downloads, management tips, discussion forums, and e-newsletters.
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