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Is
Your Computer Sick? |
by:
Jim
Edwards |
©
Jim Edwards - All Rights reserved
http://www.thenetreporter.com
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Viruses and spyware usually show up on your
computer one of
two ways.
Either they invade your system with a frontal
assault like
the Huns attacking the Romans, or they sneak
in a back door
like a cat burglar.
Either way, once a virus or piece of spyware
gets on your
system, getting it off can rate harder than
curing a severe
case of trench foot!
Viruses, malicious programs designed to
disrupt normal
computing, and spyware, programs intended
to literally "spy"
on your activities, can enter your computer
a number of
ways.
Most commonly they enter your system through
an email
attachment, by sharing files with an infected
computer by
disk, as a "ride along" with a 3rd party
program you
install, or through a "back door" port in
your computer.
Regardless of how they get on your system,
once in place,
they cause no end of headaches and frustration.
The following represent typical signs you
may suffer from
infection by a virus or piece of spyware.
Your computer starts acting oddly by doing
things it never
did previously.
Your modem starts trying to dial out to
the Internet without
you initiating a surfing session.
You notice that files start disappearing,
the system stalls,
runs slowly, or even crashes frequently.
Your computer takes progressively longer
to boot up every
time you start it or you notice that your
available hard
drive space has disappeared. Strange popup
windows appear,
even when you're not surfing the web, or
you delete a
program and it "magically" reappears next
time you boot the
system.
If you suspect you a virus or a piece of
spyware has invaded
your computer, follow these steps to first
identify and then
delete the offending code:
Step 1 - Back up your important files, but
remember to scan
these files for viruses before reinstalling
to avoid
accidentally re-infecting your system.
Step 2 - Update your anti-virus definitions
and perform a
scan of your hard drive.
If you don't carry virus protection, or
you suspect your
anti-virus software got corrupted somehow,
then log on to
www.pandasoftware.com and use the free Panda
Active Scan
service to check your hard drive for viruses.
Follow the instructions for quarantining
and removing the
offending files.
Step 3 - Scan your hard drive with an adware,
scumware, or
spyware detection and removal tool like
Adaware
www.lavasoft.de/support/download/ or Spybot
http://spybot.safer-networking.de/.
Step 4 - In many cases, when the virus or
spyware program
gets installed with a free utility or game
you download from
the Web, you must usually uninstall the
utility or game to
finally get rid of the problem once and
for all.
Step 5 - Avoid re-infection by keeping your
anti-virus and
firewall up-to-date at all times.
As a last resort, if you run into a program
you simply can't
get rid of, but can figure out the offending
file's name, do
a search for the file name on Google.com.
Often you will
find you're not the first victim and may
get valuable advice
for cleaning up your system.
However, be very careful of the information
you find and
think twice before modifying any system
files.
About the author:
Jim Edwards is a syndicated newspaper columnist
and the
co-author of an amazing new ebook that will
teach you how
to use fr^e articles to quickly drive thousands
of targeted
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Simple "Traffic Machine" brings Thousands
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