It seems to be aimed at businesses since it attacks various text documents and jpegs.
Since it spreads through email exe you should be okay if you know your shit. I know hotmail/outlook auto block email exe so I would imagine other big email hosts do as well.
According to google if MSE is up to date it should detect this malware. Someone please correct me if wrong.
But reformatting starts to become fun after the first 50 times. You start to see how fast you can get everything up and running again.I'd rather hit myself with a stick
According to google if MSE is up to date it should also detect this malware. Someone please correct me if wrong.
But reformatting starts to become fun after the first 50 times. You start to see how fast you can get everything up and running again.
Totally fun.
Does it affect Linux?
Well according to the reddit thread, only Avast and Malwarebytes Pro work without fail
is bitdefender good? is there any way i can know?
Any reason given why mse isn't reliable in this case? I know it relies on windows update to update definitions so those with it set to manual updating could be a concern.
I've always found mse to be pretty good at catching shady files. It usually deletes them while being extracted so that can't be accidentally run.
thank you. i am relieved, for now atleast.
EDIT: Okay, according to Bitdefender, their software also protects users. So that makes three known security programs that can block it before activation and encryption.
my mom has bitdefender
should i just delete it and install Avast for her just incase?
NoScript for firefox but is there one for chrome too?
I'm so glad I've stuck to Avast, this virus sounds nasty
What evil bastard came up with this?
I meant how fast can you get all your programs back, reconfigured, and running as they were before. Basically back to the state you were program/work wise.But things aren't getting slower than they were. I'm on 4.6 GHz i7-3770K, Samsung 840 Pro, 16 GB RAM, and Windows 8.1. Pretty much restarting is all BIOS posting, which is 5-10 seconds.
Doesn't seem to. But it talks about network mounts being how it propagates, so maybe Linux could be a carrier if you're using samba.
What evil bastard came up with this?
I meant how fast can you get all your programs back, reconfigured, and running as they were before. Basically back to the state you were program/work wise.
It's stupid and largely a waste of time. I only started doing it out of unfounded paranoia that MSE may not have been working properly after reports of it being sorta crappy started coming out. That said, I don't really care for Avast or AVG either for some reason. Nothing I do on the computer is shady or incredibly stupid (as far as I can tell). Everything I have installed is legal and the only email attachments I open are either from myself (school assignments) or from people I'm expecting them from.
But that FRESH COMPUTER feeling so good.
I guess the sting in the tail is that if you're on a shared network and one user gets the malware installed then the shared files will get encrypted regardless.
Not the end of the world for most users in that situation, as they likely have backups, but still a damn pain.
Sucks to be the user who is clueless and gets hit. To be honest though the number of people I've met who genuinely don't care that much when their computer gets reformatted by tech 'repair' staff is surprising. "I didn't have anything that important on there anyway."
Finally, something that justifies my weekly hard drive reformats.
Ok, what's the best backup solution at this point? Just in case. Just copy important files to an external drive? Creating an image?
Well it's not like I sit there and stare at the computer reinstalling stuff. I'll do something else in the meantime, and I have a backup USB of most of the stuff I absolutely need. The only thing that really takes a while is reinstalling Windows updates.It's actually a rather ingenious setup. I applaud the authors for their creativity, as they're probably making off with hundreds of thousands of dollars. Not everyone involved will get caught either, most likely.
I actually enjoy looking at progress bars (being a robot and all) and I don't think I'd like doing what you're wasting time on. o_o
Ok, what's the best backup solution at this point? Just in case. Just copy important files to an external drive? Creating an image?
Dropbox stores previous versions of files, so you'd be able to get the pre-encrypted file back even if somebody you trusted did get infected.I just pulled the sharing privileges for a school dropbox - not taking any risks, especially not when a minor inconvenience could protect us from this bad boy.
Yes. Encryption algorithms view files as nothing but blobs of 0s and 1s. It doesn't matter if those files are music files, text files, random data, or encrypted data. An encryption program knows how to turn arbitrary input into a random-looking file using a passkey, and how to turn the random-looking file back into the original input when the same passkey is provided again.I realize this specific ransomware looks for specific file types, but could any ransomware encrypt already encrypted files?
everyone crapping on MSE should realize only 5 out of 49 AV's detected this virus as of yesterday morning.
Would this thing (or any variation alter) be able to encrypt an already encrypted TrueCrypt volume?
I have an external drive that I can keep disconnected when not backing up, but I was thinking about making a TrueCrypt volume on an internal drive I have and only opening it to do a backup, then closing it again.
I realize this specific ransomware looks for specific file types, but could any ransomware encrypt already encrypted files?
You know, I always wondered about this. If you have 10 GB of space, does it store the previous versions in unused space? What if you're near full? How long does it go back? How much space is *really* allocated to a 10 GB account?Dropbox stores previous versions of files, so you'd be able to get the pre-encrypted file back even if somebody you trusted did get infected.
You know, I always wondered about this. If you have 10 GB of space, does it store the previous versions in unused space? What if you're near full? How long does it go back? How much space is *really* allocated to a 10 GB account?
Xzibit.jpgI am pretty sure it encrypts everything it can see on your harddrive, so yes. Something being encrypted doesn't mean that encrypted data can't further be encrypted.
I should start backing things up properly.