Forum Articles
  Welcome back Join CF
You are here You are here: Home | Forum | Virgin Media Internet Security

You are currently viewing our boards as a guest which gives you limited access to view most of the discussions, articles and other free features. By joining our Virgin Media community you will have full access to all discussions, be able to view and post threads, communicate privately with other members (PM), respond to polls, upload your own images/photos, and access many other special features. Registration is fast, simple and absolutely free so please join our community today.


Welcome to Cable Forum
Go Back   Cable Forum > Virgin Media Services > Virgin Media Internet Service
Register FAQ Community Calendar

Virgin Media Internet Security
Reply
 
Thread Tools
Old 06-05-2011, 16:55   #16
Milambar
Inactive
 
Join Date: Jan 2008
Posts: 954
Milambar has a reputation beyond reputeMilambar has a reputation beyond reputeMilambar has a reputation beyond reputeMilambar has a reputation beyond reputeMilambar has a reputation beyond reputeMilambar has a reputation beyond reputeMilambar has a reputation beyond reputeMilambar has a reputation beyond reputeMilambar has a reputation beyond reputeMilambar has a reputation beyond reputeMilambar has a reputation beyond reputeMilambar has a reputation beyond reputeMilambar has a reputation beyond repute
Re: Virgin Media Internet Security

The best improvement to a PC's performance, is the removal of VMS. Just saying.

As for a virus/trojan, the only way to be 100% sure that its gone, is a reinstall of the OS from clean sources. However, for most people, Malwarebytes does an excellent job of cleaning a system. I've found the free version of Malwarebytes able to remove stuff that my full, paid-for version of KIS2011 can't.
Milambar is offline   Reply With Quote
Advertisement
Old 06-05-2011, 17:16   #17
roughbeast
cf.mega poster
 
roughbeast's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jul 2008
Location: Coventry
Services: Fusion Fibre 900
Posts: 1,793
roughbeast has reached the bronze age
roughbeast has reached the bronze ageroughbeast has reached the bronze ageroughbeast has reached the bronze ageroughbeast has reached the bronze ageroughbeast has reached the bronze ageroughbeast has reached the bronze ageroughbeast has reached the bronze ageroughbeast has reached the bronze ageroughbeast has reached the bronze ageroughbeast has reached the bronze ageroughbeast has reached the bronze age
Re: Virgin Media Internet Security

Quote:
Originally Posted by craigj2k11 View Post
they do if you restore the system to a date before the nasties are present
Yeah, but the nasty could be anywhere. For instance, if it is in the boot sector a complete reformat and system re-installation won't get rid of it.
roughbeast is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 06-05-2011, 17:17   #18
Neo-Tech
Inactive
 
Join Date: Sep 2010
Posts: 260
Neo-Tech is on a distinguished roadNeo-Tech is on a distinguished road
Re: Virgin Media Internet Security

Quote:
Originally Posted by craigj2k11 View Post
they do if you restore the system to a date before the nasties are present
Wrong. Most sophisticated viruses and trojans infect System Restore points too.

In my opinion, remove all the Virgin crap, install Microsoft Security Essentials and Malwarebytes Antimalware and you should be good.
Neo-Tech is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 06-05-2011, 20:15   #19
craigj2k12
cf.mega poster
 
Join Date: Nov 2010
Location: Stafford
Posts: 4,225
craigj2k12 has a bronzed appealcraigj2k12 has a bronzed appeal
craigj2k12 has a bronzed appealcraigj2k12 has a bronzed appealcraigj2k12 has a bronzed appealcraigj2k12 has a bronzed appealcraigj2k12 has a bronzed appealcraigj2k12 has a bronzed appealcraigj2k12 has a bronzed appealcraigj2k12 has a bronzed appealcraigj2k12 has a bronzed appealcraigj2k12 has a bronzed appealcraigj2k12 has a bronzed appealcraigj2k12 has a bronzed appealcraigj2k12 has a bronzed appeal
Re: Virgin Media Internet Security

Quote:
Originally Posted by Neo-Tech View Post
Wrong. Most sophisticated viruses and trojans infect System Restore points too.

In my opinion, remove all the Virgin crap, install Microsoft Security Essentials and Malwarebytes Antimalware and you should be good.
depends on the virus really, the more advanced ones can affect restores, but they only usually affect windows restore, any other backup program seems to work better, and you can put the backup on a disc or usb drive or whatever

---------- Post added at 21:15 ---------- Previous post was at 21:14 ----------

Quote:
Originally Posted by roughbeast View Post
Yeah, but the nasty could be anywhere. For instance, if it is in the boot sector a complete reformat and system re-installation won't get rid of it.
are you saying that the boot sector doesnt get formatted? i dont think so
craigj2k12 is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 06-05-2011, 20:43   #20
roughbeast
cf.mega poster
 
roughbeast's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jul 2008
Location: Coventry
Services: Fusion Fibre 900
Posts: 1,793
roughbeast has reached the bronze age
roughbeast has reached the bronze ageroughbeast has reached the bronze ageroughbeast has reached the bronze ageroughbeast has reached the bronze ageroughbeast has reached the bronze ageroughbeast has reached the bronze ageroughbeast has reached the bronze ageroughbeast has reached the bronze ageroughbeast has reached the bronze ageroughbeast has reached the bronze ageroughbeast has reached the bronze age
Re: Virgin Media Internet Security

Quote:
Originally Posted by craigj2k11 View Post
depends on the virus really, the more advanced ones can affect restores, but they only usually affect windows restore, any other backup program seems to work better, and you can put the backup on a disc or usb drive or whatever

---------- Post added at 21:15 ---------- Previous post was at 21:14 ----------



are you saying that the boot sector doesnt get formatted? i dont think so
A simple reformat deleting partitions will not get rid of boot sector viruses, especially where folk have hidden boot sectors and the like; the sort that some pre installed versions of Windows have from companies like Dell. Fdisk / mbr followed by a complete reformat will totally wipe a disc.
roughbeast is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 06-05-2011, 22:23   #21
Nopanic
Inactive
 
Join Date: Jan 2011
Location: Northwest
Posts: 2,249
Nopanic has reached the bronze age
Nopanic has reached the bronze ageNopanic has reached the bronze ageNopanic has reached the bronze ageNopanic has reached the bronze ageNopanic has reached the bronze ageNopanic has reached the bronze ageNopanic has reached the bronze ageNopanic has reached the bronze ageNopanic has reached the bronze ageNopanic has reached the bronze ageNopanic has reached the bronze ageNopanic has reached the bronze ageNopanic has reached the bronze ageNopanic has reached the bronze ageNopanic has reached the bronze ageNopanic has reached the bronze ageNopanic has reached the bronze age
Re: Virgin Media Internet Security

Quote:
Originally Posted by roughbeast View Post
A simple reformat deleting partitions will not get rid of boot sector viruses, especially where folk have hidden boot sectors and the like; the sort that some pre installed versions of Windows have from companies like Dell. Fdisk / mbr followed by a complete reformat will totally wipe a disc.
Deleting the partitions will remove everything .. as the pre installed windows will be on a partition ..
Nopanic is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 06-05-2011, 23:30   #22
craigj2k12
cf.mega poster
 
Join Date: Nov 2010
Location: Stafford
Posts: 4,225
craigj2k12 has a bronzed appealcraigj2k12 has a bronzed appeal
craigj2k12 has a bronzed appealcraigj2k12 has a bronzed appealcraigj2k12 has a bronzed appealcraigj2k12 has a bronzed appealcraigj2k12 has a bronzed appealcraigj2k12 has a bronzed appealcraigj2k12 has a bronzed appealcraigj2k12 has a bronzed appealcraigj2k12 has a bronzed appealcraigj2k12 has a bronzed appealcraigj2k12 has a bronzed appealcraigj2k12 has a bronzed appealcraigj2k12 has a bronzed appeal
Re: Virgin Media Internet Security

Quote:
Originally Posted by Nopanic View Post
Deleting the partitions will remove everything .. as the pre installed windows will be on a partition ..
boot sector is just a regular partition, its only hidden by windows
craigj2k12 is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 07-05-2011, 00:07   #23
pip08456
Sad Doig Fan!
 
pip08456's Avatar
 
Join Date: Aug 2007
Location: Barry South Wales
Age: 70
Services: With VM for BB 250Mb service.(Deal)
Posts: 11,847
pip08456 has a nice shiny starpip08456 has a nice shiny starpip08456 has a nice shiny star
pip08456 has a nice shiny starpip08456 has a nice shiny starpip08456 has a nice shiny starpip08456 has a nice shiny star
Re: Virgin Media Internet Security

Quote:
Originally Posted by Nopanic View Post
Deleting the partitions will remove everything .. as the pre installed windows will be on a partition ..
Quote:
Originally Posted by craigj2k11 View Post
boot sector is just a regular partition, its only hidden by windows
Quite true. But if you wanted to go overboard you could perform a low level format back to RAW state and then re-format with either NTFS of FAT32 depending on your windows OS.
pip08456 is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 07-05-2011, 07:39   #24
Nopanic
Inactive
 
Join Date: Jan 2011
Location: Northwest
Posts: 2,249
Nopanic has reached the bronze age
Nopanic has reached the bronze ageNopanic has reached the bronze ageNopanic has reached the bronze ageNopanic has reached the bronze ageNopanic has reached the bronze ageNopanic has reached the bronze ageNopanic has reached the bronze ageNopanic has reached the bronze ageNopanic has reached the bronze ageNopanic has reached the bronze ageNopanic has reached the bronze ageNopanic has reached the bronze ageNopanic has reached the bronze ageNopanic has reached the bronze ageNopanic has reached the bronze ageNopanic has reached the bronze ageNopanic has reached the bronze age
Re: Virgin Media Internet Security

Quote:
Originally Posted by craigj2k11 View Post
boot sector is just a regular partition, its only hidden by windows
Did you just agree with me ?
Nopanic is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 07-05-2011, 10:21   #25
roughbeast
cf.mega poster
 
roughbeast's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jul 2008
Location: Coventry
Services: Fusion Fibre 900
Posts: 1,793
roughbeast has reached the bronze age
roughbeast has reached the bronze ageroughbeast has reached the bronze ageroughbeast has reached the bronze ageroughbeast has reached the bronze ageroughbeast has reached the bronze ageroughbeast has reached the bronze ageroughbeast has reached the bronze ageroughbeast has reached the bronze ageroughbeast has reached the bronze ageroughbeast has reached the bronze ageroughbeast has reached the bronze age
Re: Virgin Media Internet Security

Quote:
Originally Posted by pip08456 View Post
Quite true. But if you wanted to go overboard you could perform a low level format back to RAW state and then re-format with either NTFS of FAT32 depending on your windows OS.
I think that is what I was recommending, just to be sure. Why just use a belt when you can wear braces as well? Fdisk / MBR then reformat.
roughbeast is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 07-05-2011, 10:59   #26
pip08456
Sad Doig Fan!
 
pip08456's Avatar
 
Join Date: Aug 2007
Location: Barry South Wales
Age: 70
Services: With VM for BB 250Mb service.(Deal)
Posts: 11,847
pip08456 has a nice shiny starpip08456 has a nice shiny starpip08456 has a nice shiny star
pip08456 has a nice shiny starpip08456 has a nice shiny starpip08456 has a nice shiny starpip08456 has a nice shiny star
Re: Virgin Media Internet Security

By recommending Fdisk you are also advocating the use of FAT16/FAT32 rather than the more stable NTFS.
pip08456 is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 07-05-2011, 11:30   #27
craigj2k12
cf.mega poster
 
Join Date: Nov 2010
Location: Stafford
Posts: 4,225
craigj2k12 has a bronzed appealcraigj2k12 has a bronzed appeal
craigj2k12 has a bronzed appealcraigj2k12 has a bronzed appealcraigj2k12 has a bronzed appealcraigj2k12 has a bronzed appealcraigj2k12 has a bronzed appealcraigj2k12 has a bronzed appealcraigj2k12 has a bronzed appealcraigj2k12 has a bronzed appealcraigj2k12 has a bronzed appealcraigj2k12 has a bronzed appealcraigj2k12 has a bronzed appealcraigj2k12 has a bronzed appealcraigj2k12 has a bronzed appeal
Re: Virgin Media Internet Security

Quote:
Originally Posted by Nopanic View Post
Did you just agree with me ?
no, i was agreeing with myself, did you say the same as me? you must have agreed with me!

---------- Post added at 12:27 ---------- Previous post was at 12:26 ----------

Quote:
Originally Posted by roughbeast View Post
I think that is what I was recommending, just to be sure. Why just use a belt when you can wear braces as well? Fdisk / MBR then reformat.
dont forget your tinfoil hat

if you can pm me with a link to any virus/trojan/malware/anything that can survive when you format the hard drive, i will load it onto my computer, just to format it to prove you wrong

---------- Post added at 12:30 ---------- Previous post was at 12:27 ----------

Quote:
Originally Posted by pip08456 View Post
By recommending Fdisk you are also advocating the use of FAT16/FAT32 rather than the more stable NTFS.
the only reason FAT should be used over NTFS is if you are using Windows 95/98/Me, which you shouldn't be!

besides the fact that FAT is less secure than NTFS in the first place, you would be using an unsupported operating system, with old software not up to date with providing protection against the latest nasties

NTFS also lets you use file compression, and drive read/write speeds are quicker under NTFS
craigj2k12 is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 07-05-2011, 13:34   #28
adzii_nufc
Rafalution
 
adzii_nufc's Avatar
 
Join Date: Sep 2009
Age: 35
Posts: 5,345
adzii_nufc has a bronzed appealadzii_nufc has a bronzed appeal
adzii_nufc has a bronzed appealadzii_nufc has a bronzed appealadzii_nufc has a bronzed appealadzii_nufc has a bronzed appealadzii_nufc has a bronzed appealadzii_nufc has a bronzed appealadzii_nufc has a bronzed appealadzii_nufc has a bronzed appealadzii_nufc has a bronzed appeal
Re: Virgin Media Internet Security

If someone were to create a virus that could not be removed via formatting..

I think he would aim a bit higher than infecting a machine with Virgin Internet Security


Quote:
if you can pm me with a link to any virus/trojan/malware/anything that can survive when you format the hard drive, i will load it onto my computer, just to format it to prove you wrong
Nothing is Impossible... Although I doubt it would be your average Virus
__________________
All posts are the opinion of myself and don't reflect those of BT or Openreach.
adzii_nufc is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 07-05-2011, 13:51   #29
craigj2k12
cf.mega poster
 
Join Date: Nov 2010
Location: Stafford
Posts: 4,225
craigj2k12 has a bronzed appealcraigj2k12 has a bronzed appeal
craigj2k12 has a bronzed appealcraigj2k12 has a bronzed appealcraigj2k12 has a bronzed appealcraigj2k12 has a bronzed appealcraigj2k12 has a bronzed appealcraigj2k12 has a bronzed appealcraigj2k12 has a bronzed appealcraigj2k12 has a bronzed appealcraigj2k12 has a bronzed appealcraigj2k12 has a bronzed appealcraigj2k12 has a bronzed appealcraigj2k12 has a bronzed appealcraigj2k12 has a bronzed appeal
Re: Virgin Media Internet Security

Quote:
Originally Posted by adzii_nufc View Post
If someone were to create a virus that could not be removed via formatting..

I think he would aim a bit higher than infecting a machine with Virgin Internet Security




Nothing is Impossible... Although I doubt it would be your average Virus
when a hard drive is formatted, everything is wiped completley

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Disk_formatting
craigj2k12 is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 07-05-2011, 13:54   #30
pip08456
Sad Doig Fan!
 
pip08456's Avatar
 
Join Date: Aug 2007
Location: Barry South Wales
Age: 70
Services: With VM for BB 250Mb service.(Deal)
Posts: 11,847
pip08456 has a nice shiny starpip08456 has a nice shiny starpip08456 has a nice shiny star
pip08456 has a nice shiny starpip08456 has a nice shiny starpip08456 has a nice shiny starpip08456 has a nice shiny star
Re: Virgin Media Internet Security

Quote:
Originally Posted by craigj2k11 View Post
the only reason FAT should be used over NTFS is if you are using Windows 95/98/Me, which you shouldn't be!

besides the fact that FAT is less secure than NTFS in the first place, you would be using an unsupported operating system, with old software not up to date with providing protection against the latest nasties

NTFS also lets you use file compression, and drive read/write speeds are quicker under NTFS
I wasn't advocating to use of this outdated tech.

It is also worth noting that companies (eg, Hewlett Packard, Dell et al) were supplying XP to home users on a FAT32 platform for a few years.(it will work on it,).
pip08456 is offline   Reply With Quote
Reply


Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off

Forum Jump


All times are GMT. The time now is 11:15.


Server: lithium.zmnt.uk
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.11
Copyright ©2000 - 2026, vBulletin Solutions Inc.
All Posts and Content are © Cable Forum