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How I Dealt With an ave.exe Virus Infection

Ave.exe Removal Instructions

If you have this ave.exe rogue anti-virus infection and are too anxious to read this posting, these are the removal steps that worked for me on Windows XP:

  1. Type Ctrl/Shift/Escape to bring up the task manager.
  2. Kill the ave.exe process. The popups will disappear. Leave the task scheduler up.
  3. Type Windows/R (to get the Run box) and type regedit and OK.
  4. Ave.exe will start again, just do step #2 again.
    [Note: Be careful with regedit. If you are not familiar with it, use other solutions for this infection]
  5. In Regedit, go to HKCR\.exe\shell\open\command. You will see something like this for (default):
    "C:\Documents and Settings\[your account]\Local Settings\Application Data\ave.exe" /START "%1" %*
  6. Modify the value to be:
    "%1" %*
  7. Do the same with HKCR\secfile\shell\open\command.
  8. Delete ave.exe from the location in step 5.
    At this point, you have control back and no more popups.
  9. Download the current version of Malwarebytes' Anti-Malware and run it.
  10. Choose to fix the items the scan found.
  11. Run a scan of your regular anit-virus program.
  12. Now you can read the rest of this post and add a comment about your experience!

 

This week I attended the Microsoft MIX10 Web Designer/Developer conference in Las Vegas. After the last session of the last day, before they kicked me out of the hall with the free WiFi, I somehow contracted a virus (I think from isohunt.com though just from browsing the site; I did no downloads). I actually did not realize it until the next time I started the laptop. I got a virus infection warning popup and then another window opened automatically running a scan and finding lots of infected files.

  ave1           ave2

Then a tray notification bubbled up with more warnings.

  ave3

The laptop was really scared out of its mind!

Well, I did not recognize the program displaying the warnings. The laptop is an old Dell running WinXP and is up to date with patches and runs AVG Free as its anti-virus software. The window title of the warning and scanner was Total XP Security. I suspected the laptop was infected with a virus that mimicked an anti-virus program. Process status showed ave.exe, a process that I did not recognize. Killing the process closed the popups. Until the next run of a program (like explorer). Some programs would not start at all (like my AVG scanner).

I searched for ave.exe but the search did not find it (it was there but hidden). I then searched for all files modified today and it found lots that shouldn’t have been. Exe’s that were installed long ago had a timestamp of the time the conference ended.

So with my laptop basically disabled, I used my BlackBerry to googled for ave.exe virus. There were several hits and I selected the Virus Removal Guru site. Looking at the manual removal instructions, I killed the ave.exe process and then I located the ave.exe (C:\Documents and Settings\[username]\Local Settings\Application Data\ave.exe) and removed it.

Well all of a sudden, none of my programs would start. They displayed the Windows dialog box to select a program to run the exe(?). That indicated to me that the programs first ran the ave.exe and then it did its work and transferred back to the originally requested program. Without ave.exe around, the requested program could no longer start up. The program I really wanted to run was regedit to fix up the registry. The running explorer still worked but I could not start up a new one.

I noticed that the programs in my launch bar (PowerBar) still ran but the same program would not run from explorer. I dragged regedit into the launch bar and clicked it and it did run! OK, Now I was back in business. I continued with the manual instructions from Guru but the registry keys it mentioned did not exist. I was hesitant to run their automatic removal tool since I am not familiar with their site. My next step in regedit was a search for ave.exe. There were several hits (ignore the scnsave.exe hits). The hits showed how it intercepted the execution of programs to do its deed first.

The first hit was:

HKCR\.exe\shell\open\command
(default)
"C:\Documents and Settings\Gary\Local Settings\Application Data\ave.exe" /START "%1" %*

I changed it to match others that were not altered:

"%1" %*

This did not work. The programs still failed to start. I went to the next hit

HKCR\secfile\shell\open\command

This did work (phew!)

There were a few more hits related to Iexplore and FireFox.

So things are working better now. I started up a complete scan with AVG Free and it is still running. I will research some more to make sure everything is cleaned out before claiming success.

Here’s another link and there are several others. As this post mentions, manual removal of viruses is generally difficult and if you make mistakes changing the registry, you may damage your system.

Well, I am now at the Las Vegas airport, waiting for the time to board my midnight red-eye back to Ft. Lauderdale. I was wondering what I was going to do to fill the time between 6pm and midnight. So a successful virus eradication plus a blog post were not on my plans but I guess you do what you’ve gotta do:)

[Update] Some of the research shows that this virus may be removed by recent versions of Malwarebytes' Anti-Malware. Anti-Malware found many infections which I chose to fix all. I then ran the AVG scan and it found none.

Some references about this virus:

I think the way I got infected was at isohunt.com. I clicked a link in the right nav Top Searches; went to the second search-results page which partially displayed the hits and then displayed a warning about the site containing malicious software. I clicked in the warning and exited the site completely. I think clicking on the warning is what initiated the download of the infection.

Print | posted on Thursday, March 18, 2010 1:41 AM |

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# re: How I Dealt With an ave.exe Virus Infection

Hi Gary

I faced the same problem as you today and even through your guide did not completely killed the virus, it gives me a clue for what to search on google. here are two sites that may help you:

Broken exe association
http://filext.com/faq/broken_exe_association.php

How to fix the registry: (read the comment by Jaquith)
www.symantec.com/.../xp-internet-security-2010-...
3/19/2010 7:13 AM | Ronnie
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# re: How I Dealt With an ave.exe Virus Infection

I wanted to let you know I had the same exact infection happen to me while on isohunt so you are probably right in your assumption you got it from there.
3/19/2010 10:00 AM | em etib
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# re: How I Dealt With an ave.exe Virus Infection

Yesterday, I too picked up this virus immediately after browsing isohunt. I haven't been successful as of yet to remove it. I'm tired and frustrated and laying in bed when I came across this website. Will try the suggestions in the morning.
3/20/2010 12:45 AM | James
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# re: How I Dealt With an ave.exe Virus Infection

2 days ago the 18th I picked up the same virus from browsing isohunt.com. I did the same. If you have Win 7 here is the link to download missing file association for exe files.

www.winhelponline.com/.../file-asso-fixes-for-w...
3/20/2010 6:44 AM | James
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# re: How I Dealt With an ave.exe Virus Infection

Hi

MY laptop was attacked by this virus this morning while I was trying to watch some live cricket matches. I also tried to install some flash player. I followed your instructions and I think I have got rid of this virus. So, thanks a lot.

Pratanu
3/20/2010 11:12 PM | Pratanu Roy
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# re: How I Dealt With an ave.exe Virus Infection

thank you so so much!
i finally got rid of the damn thing!!!!
3/21/2010 2:43 PM | Tai
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# re: How I Dealt With an ave.exe Virus Infection

This fix worked for me, malware was acquired on isohunt from a banner displaying only a green "Download" button directly above iso's own download button.
3/22/2010 4:57 AM | Lysander Spooner
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# re: How I Dealt With an ave.exe Virus Infection

Gary I understand what i am meant to do to get rid of, do i use those sites you've wrote down?
3/22/2010 6:05 AM | Natalie
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# re: How I Dealt With an ave.exe Virus Infection

I just got this virus - any attempt to open a program brings up a window asking me what program I want to run it. I tried to stop it but couldn't find it in the list of running processes. Any other suggestions? Am using XP.
3/22/2010 12:16 PM | Gee
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# re: How I Dealt With an ave.exe Virus Infection

Natalie - the urls at the bottom of the post are for reference in case you want to read up on other articles about this virus.


Gee - If you are getting popups based on this virus, you should be able to see ave.exe in the list of running processes. In my case, it started for each program that was run - often it did nothing but usually it popped up one of the AV dialogs.

Try rebooting your computer and immediatly start up the Task Manager to view the running processes. On a reboot many processes are started up. Each will start up ave.exe first and you will see lots of them come and go until you system settles down, at which point there should only be one remaining. Kill it and follow the steps above.

-- Gary
3/22/2010 4:51 PM | gary
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# re: How I Dealt With an ave.exe Virus Infection

I had this also, I found that these steps were helpful in recovering the computer.
I believe this infection is coming from FLASH or somehow related.
Some of our computers onsite don't have flash installed and have never received this infection, however I've noted a number of computers that use FLASH and have been infected.
Thoughts?

---RawBT
3/24/2010 2:54 PM | RawBT
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# re: How I Dealt With an ave.exe Virus Infection

I suspect a popup is displayed asking you to upgrade your Flash player for the website and clicking that is what initiates the infection. I routinely accept the Flash player update requests (Adobe reader, too), but no longer. I will scrutinize these from now on.

-- Gary
3/25/2010 1:24 PM | gary
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# re: How I Dealt With an ave.exe Virus Infection

Don't have time to elaborate but This is what i did.
fix by deleting the entire secfile directory found at HKCR\secfile\ .
then click on HKCR\.exe change secfile to exefile
and under HKCR\.exe delete all subfolders except for persistent handler

Problem Solved
3/26/2010 10:50 PM | Jason
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# re: How I Dealt With an ave.exe Virus Infection

Thank you, Gary. Found your blog notes after recoverying and searching for answers as to how to prevent this from happening again. Still looking.

Here's what i did, in brief (as most arriving to this point will have a lot of the gory details...
NOTE.. NEAR THE END I LIST AN ADDITIONAL THING I FOUND I HAVE NOT SEEN LISTED ANYWHERE... don't knwo if its relevant, but it appeared to be so...

1. Kill ave.exe and hunt it down everywhere and delete it, including occurance in prefetch
2. Work on restoring the registry, per infos gathered.
3. do some general xtra cleanup in temp folders and such

Then back in business, but a couple hours later -->> slam again !?

On the second go 'round I discovered a file copied to four places that was time/date stamped same as ave.exe related buggers. Since I had not installed anything myself, and I know my system pretty darned well, I suspected they were related and I deleted them. I am currently one hour out of woods (after repair).

***********
I found a file named: OgDbc43wei with no extension, attribs set as a system file, in 4 directories, as follows:

C:\Documents and settings\…
– Local Settings\Application Data
– Local Settings\Temp
– \Templates
– C:\Documents and settings\All Users\Application Data

When I look at the file contents with some differnt utils, it is obviously encrypted.

Since I had scanned fully and everything else after the first go-'round, I was pretty surprised to see this silly bugger back so soon. Right now that extra file is suspect in my book, but I have read nothing similar to this anywhere so far, so I don't know.

I want to know hot to PREVENT THIS FROM infecting again!!

cheers and good luck to all ;^)
3/27/2010 4:15 PM | TwoHawks
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# re: How I Dealt With an ave.exe Virus Infection

TwoHawks,

Like you I've been keep getting hit again and again with the files created in the 4 directories you mentioned, and in \Documents and Settings\NetworkService\Local Settings\App Data\ and \Windows\Temp.

Tired of keep cleaning, I ran TDSSKILLER and it found TDSS rootkit in ATAPI.SYS. TDSSKILLER log shows that it found a good copy and replaced the bad copy when rebooted. It's been several hours and so far I have not been hit again.

Warning: I chose to have TDSSKILLER replace ATAPI.SYS on reboot, and when reboot, my machine locked up. Can't even boot into Safe Mode. I was only (or luckily) able to boot when I chose "the last working..." Search for "tdss rootkit atapi.sys" to find some other solutions in replacing ATAPI.SYS.
3/29/2010 6:09 AM | CowboyCoder
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# re: How I Dealt With an ave.exe Virus Infection

Ugh got this yesterday. Did exactly what was described at the top and viola it worked like a charm. Now today it's returned so I go right back to the handy little guide here and start the process anew. To my horror, default, "HKCR/.exe/.../command" reads precisely the way I left it yesterday (no mention of ave.exe). So then I move to the "HKCR/secfile/.../command". "Secfile" doesnt even exist anymore. I've tried MAM and it doesn't seem to notice any trace of the virus. But it is still here. Any ideas as to what to do from here? I can use regedit but really I'm not that savvy with all this.
4/1/2010 5:01 PM | firvulag
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# re: How I Dealt With an ave.exe Virus Infection

Update to above post. Hmm I don't actually have it per se. It seems that even though I've changed the registry keys I must have some lingering instances of it somewhere. I was actually on the site where I believe I got it from to begin with, when it popped up again (today). So somehow the site is triggering it but it's not full blown as far as I can tell. MAM is still no help, but everything seems to be running fine atm. Boy what a pain. Thank god for people like you guys who can delve into this crap. ;)
4/1/2010 6:46 PM | firvulag
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# re: How I Dealt With an ave.exe Virus Infection

firvulag,

Look into these directories and see if there are oddly named files without extension with recent time stamps:

C:\Documents and settings\<user name>\

– Local Settings\Application Data
– Local Settings\Temp
– Templates

C:\Documents and settings\All Users\Application Data
C:\Documents and settings\NetworkService\Local Settings\Application Data

C:\Windows\Temp
4/1/2010 9:05 PM | CowboyCoder
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# re: How I Dealt With an ave.exe Virus Infection

YESSSSSS!!! i finally got rid of this virus but i couldnt open my registry until i downloaded the RegAlyzer from www.spybot-updates.biz/files/regalyz-1.6.2.16.exe so if you need help deleting it go to the website and download the program, but thanks to Gary i finally learned how to delete this virus thanks(:
4/3/2010 2:16 PM | thanks
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# re: How I Dealt With an ave.exe Virus Infection

i have done everything and cannot get rid of this thing. i downloaded the anti-malware program on this site and ave.exe keeps killing it before it runs. i can run my avg free but nothing has come up so far. i have my task manager constantly open to kill ave when it pops up but this is getting very annoying. i also delete it in ther registry and do a file search and delete that too, but it keeps coming back.

any ideas please? im pulling my hair out.
4/3/2010 6:03 PM | charles
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# re: How I Dealt With an ave.exe Virus Infection

charles,

See my post above on TDSS rootkit.
4/3/2010 7:01 PM | CowboyCoder
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# re: How I Dealt With an ave.exe Virus Infection

omg. i finally got it. thanks everyone for the great advice. i thought i had a new paper weight.

here is some more good advice for the aftermath of the "ave.exe" virus once you rid of it and still can't open your programs.

again, thanks.
4/3/2010 7:43 PM | charles
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# re: How I Dealt With an ave.exe Virus Infection

CowboyCoder:

I checked the locations you mentioned and I did find the file you mentioned in most of the folders you mentioned:

C:\Documents and settings\<user name>\
– Local Settings\Application Data
– Local Settings\Temp
– Templates

C:\Documents and settings\All Users\Application Data
C:\Documents and settings\NetworkService\Local Settings\Application Data [not found]
C:\Windows\Temp [not found here either]

In my case, the file was named "6pnFj01o". It is 11KB and timestamped with the time of the original infection. I submitted the file to an online scanner (http://virusscan.jotti.org/) and it was not found to be a recognized infection. I did delete them, however.

Note that my system has been stable since the initial steps listed at the start of this article, inspite of these weird files.

Thanks for the additional info.

-- Gary
4/4/2010 10:15 PM | Gary Davis
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# re: How I Dealt With an ave.exe Virus Infection

CowboyCoder:

I checked the locations you mentioned and I did find the file you mentioned in most of the folders you mentioned:

C:\Documents and settings\<user name>\
– Local Settings\Application Data
– Local Settings\Temp
– Templates

C:\Documents and settings\All Users\Application Data
C:\Documents and settings\NetworkService\Local Settings\Application Data [not found]
C:\Windows\Temp [not found here either]

In my case, the file was named "6pnFj01o". It is 11KB and timestamped with the time of the original infection. I submitted the file to an online scanner (http://virusscan.jotti.org/) and it was not found to be a recognized infection. I did delete them, however.

Note that my system has been stable since the initial steps listed at the start of this article, inspite of these weird files.

Thanks for the additional info.

-- Gary
4/4/2010 10:20 PM | Gary Davis
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# re: How I Dealt With an ave.exe Virus Infection

Gary,

The weirdly named files were all cleared by MBAM and avast!, except Prevx sometimes flagged the one in \win\temp as ave.exe, IIRC, when there was only a weirdly named file in it by Windows Explorer. Regret that I didn't look into the file why Prevx flagged as ave.exe as I was only interested in getting rid of the malware in a hurry.
4/5/2010 6:12 AM | CowboyCoder
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# re: How I Dealt With an ave.exe Virus Infection

i was infected with the antivirus xp spyware.
i have cured it by downloading and running superantispyware from www.superantispyware.com/...ispywarefreevspro.html
after this my .exe files would not work but i followed the instructions on www.adamsdvds.co.uk/.../exe_not_working.php
and now everything is back to normal with no infection!
success!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

i hope this helps.
4/6/2010 6:05 AM | tony
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# re: How I Dealt With an ave.exe Virus Infection

had some luck using the registry however my firefox still does not open, any ideas?
4/6/2010 5:18 PM | manuel
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# re: How I Dealt With an ave.exe Virus Infection

I found those weird system files in these folders:

C:\Documents and settings\<user name>\
– Local Settings\Application Data
– Local Settings\Temp
– Templates

C:\Documents and settings\All Users\Application Data

They are in my recycle bin right now.

However I keep running Malware bytes and it keeps returning this result:

"C:\Documents and Settings\LocalService\Local Settings\Application Data\ave.exe" /START "%1"%*

If I delete it, or modify the value (by adding the extra space) it keeps returning to this value. I can't get rid of it!

4/6/2010 6:08 PM | Ray
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# re: How I Dealt With an ave.exe Virus Infection

Sorry, the above hit from Malware bytes is located in HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\secfile\shell\open\command\.
4/6/2010 6:14 PM | Ray
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# re: How I Dealt With an ave.exe Virus Infection

Ray,

Step 7 above refers to the very registry key.
4/6/2010 10:52 PM | CowboyCoder
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# re: How I Dealt With an ave.exe Virus Infection

So, we leave the HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\secfile\shell\open\command string with the extra space?
4/7/2010 10:05 AM | Ray
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# re: How I Dealt With an ave.exe Virus Infection

Step 5 & 6:

"C:\Documents and Settings\[your account]\Local Settings\Application Data\ave.exe" /START "%1" %*

Modify the above value to be:
"%1" %*

4/7/2010 10:50 AM | CowboyCoder
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# re: How I Dealt With an ave.exe Virus Infection

Doh! Got it now, thanks.
4/7/2010 11:28 AM | Ray
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# re: How I Dealt With an ave.exe Virus Infection

well it took me a minute to figure out what you were talking about in the registry "HKCR" didnt make sense to me at first... i got it now... the two values are switched, everything is working so far and malwarebytes is downloaded and running now..... so far everything is working out perfectly, thanks so much, i have ALOT of important stuff on that computer....

there was a person above who said everything worked then it all came back... im wondering if they stopped before downloading malwarebytes.. and i hope this program is safe.
4/7/2010 11:08 PM | Nic
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# re: How I Dealt With an ave.exe Virus Infection

ok!!... all done scanning... seems to be completely fine.... we will see lol..

thank you everyone..
4/8/2010 12:42 AM | Nic
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# re: How I Dealt With an ave.exe Virus Infection

Great!!!! AVAST didn't detect this virus when I was browsing a very familiar forum... I suspect for one post... when I've entered at this post I've get infected without nothing downloading :(

I folloewd the steps descrived avobe and all's allright by now :)

- Stop process
- Erase ave.exe (at his folder but at the recycler too)
- Erase lines from register

Thanks a lot!!!!!!
4/11/2010 11:57 AM | sr_james
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# re: How I Dealt With an ave.exe Virus Infection

Thank you very much! It is working fine!
4/11/2010 4:58 PM | Dario Zanelli
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# re: How I Dealt With an ave.exe Virus Infection

I also scored ave.exe from isohunt just today (have previously got a similar one from sumotorrent)
Nod32 reports it as Kryptik.dsw trojan. Was easy enough to remove reg entries and the exe's and then fixing the .exe problem. Another problem I'm experiencing now though is WinXP Security center no longer appears in system tray even though opening it from CP says its all running and fine. I'm also experiencing a solid 1 minute delay in start menu/system tray response on start up.
4/20/2010 1:22 PM | Awsam
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# re: How I Dealt With an ave.exe Virus Infection

None of this worked. I'm soooo pissed I'm Dell to throw my Dell M6300 out the window. This SUX!!!!!!!!!!!!!! I'd like to meet the freak that created this and anally insert my laptop.
4/20/2010 4:23 PM | TedM
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# re: How I Dealt With an ave.exe Virus Infection

After reading a different suggested manual removal of ave.exe, I made the mistake of deleting the whole line containing ave.exe in several places in the registry using regedit (and not replacing it with "%1" %*). Not only did it not get rid of ave.exe, I created a mode where I couldn't run any .exe program (including malwarebytes)! You're right; you have to be very careful with the registry. I went back and undid all the changes I made, and when I was finally able to run malwarebytes, it deleted the virus. I wish I had come to this blog first before I had tried anything else.
4/20/2010 9:28 PM | Larry Brown
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# re: How I Dealt With an ave.exe Virus Infection

Great you removed it from running, and the registry is clean.. Did you take into account this also delivers a rootkit? You would be well advised to download combofix.com, from bleepingcomputer or somewhere that you deem safe. Yes isohunt, and most larger torrent sites are magnets for this crap, I've fixed half a dozen or more of these since last week, and it seems to really be hitting XP pro machines.

AVG will not clean it, or even see it, Norton and Macafee are both a joke too. Kaspersky might get it, but again it's not going to rid you of the rootkit. Keep malwarebytes handy, run that after combofix. Always put combofix directly on your desktop and run it from there, also make sure ALL scanners especially AVG is disabled as they occasionally interfere with combofix doing it's business, also be patient. Do not manually shut your machine down while it's running, unless you fancy rebuilding your master boot record.

I will truly break the arm of the monkey who programmed these, I am so sick of malware and scareware..
4/26/2010 11:49 AM | Gossamer
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# re: How I Dealt With an ave.exe Virus Infection

Thanks for the post. I picked this up today on Megaupload. It came to me through a Java runtime vulnerability, which you can google - it seems like the latest update to JRE fixes the vulnerability.
4/28/2010 10:34 PM | Adam
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# re: How I Dealt With an ave.exe Virus Infection

This looks like a variation on the Internet Security 2011 virus. There is tons of info on it if you google it. To restore your executables, try this. Open Notepad, Type in REGEDIT and on the second line type EXPLORER Save the file at the root of the C: drive and call it test.bat (or any .bat file that you want to call it). Go to CMD and type test.bat. Your executables should open now.
5/15/2011 6:56 PM | sidwell
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# re: How I Dealt With an ave.exe Virus Infection

Kaspersky might likely prevent the virus from harming other files but it can't completely remove the virus. Sidwell has a simlple solution but I doubt there would be issues along the way.
6/3/2011 6:48 AM | pc virus removal

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