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View Full Version : Best Ad-ware program?


Toronto
09-16-2004, 02:49 PM
does anyone know of a good ad-ware cleaner?

i seem to get these random pop-ups, and spy-bot and ad-aware 6 don't seem to clean them. and i am always of having to change my homepage back to blank.

AlienDB7
09-16-2004, 03:09 PM
Try the instructions at: http://www.pestpatrol.com/Support/HowTo/How_To_Clear_a_Hijack.asp

na2o
09-16-2004, 03:11 PM
i had the same problem until i used the Yahoo toolbar... it has anti-spy which i thought was crappy until i used it and it turned out to be better than ad-aware 6

Toronto
09-16-2004, 03:20 PM
Try the instructions at: http://www.pestpatrol.com/Support/HowTo/How_To_Clear_a_Hijack.asp

link says "The document you have requested does not exist on this system. Please check the URL and try again or look at the listing of products and services below to find information you're looking for."

AlienDB7
09-16-2004, 03:23 PM
The link works fine for me, at least in mozilla. The spyware must be good enough to block those links :)

itsthepham
09-16-2004, 03:37 PM
Yeah, I don't get spyware that much anymore ever since I installed SP2. but other than that I use Ad-Aware SE and that's about it.

5vz-fe
09-16-2004, 03:43 PM
How To Clear a Hijack
A Hijacker is any software that resets your browser's settings to point to other sites. Hijacks may reroute your info and address requests through an unseen site, capturing that info. In such hijacks, your browser may behave normally, but be slower. Search Hijackers change your search settings. Homepage Hijackers will change your home page to some other site. Error Hijackers will display a new error page when a requested URL is not found. Hijacking has become very common, as these examples illustrate. This document explains how to clear such hijacks of Microsoft Internet Explorer (IE) manually and how to prevent it by disabling scripting.


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Search Hijacks
http://www.pestpatrol.com/Support/Images/IE%20SearchButton.gif
If your Search capability has been hijacked, your use of IE's Search Button (see below) will lead to unexpected (and usually unwanted) results.

What the hijacker has done is to change four registry keys:

In the Root key HKEY_CURRENT_USER, the key Software\Microsoft\Internet Explorer\Main has a value "Search Page" that has likely been reset to something like "http://www.secret-crush.com/search/search.php"
The value "Search Bar" in this key has also likely been reset to something.
In the Root key HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE, the key Software\Microsoft\Internet Explorer\Search has a value "SearchAssistant" that has likely been reset to something
The value "CustomizeSearch" in this key has also likely been reset to something.

Fixing this is simple. From IE's top menu bar, select the Tools menu. On this menu, choose "Internet Options". It will display a popup dialog box. Click on the Programs tab, to see a display like that on the right.

Find the button near the bottom labeled "Reset Web Settings". Give it a click, and these four registry settings will be corrected.

Preventing this is simple, too. Follow the instructions in Disabling Scripting below.
http://www.pestpatrol.com/Support/Images/IE%20Internet%20Options%20Tools%20Programs.gif

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HomePage Hijacks
If your Home page changes unexpectedly, you have a "HomePage hijack", and will see this page each time you invoke your browser. What the hijacker has done is to change the registry key:

In the Root key HKEY_CURRENT_USER, the key Software\Microsoft\Internet Explorer\Main has a value "Start Page" that has likely been reset to something.
In the Root key HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE, the key Software\Microsoft\Internet Explorer\Main has a value "Start Page" that has likely been reset to something like http://yourbookmarks.ws/
Fixing this seems simple, but some pests make repair a bit more difficult. For instance, CWS.Bootconf sets the first of these entries to http://%77%77%77%2e%63%6f%6f%6c%77%77%77%73%65%61%72%63 %68%2e%63%6f%6d/%7a/%61/%78%31%2e%63%67%69?%36%35%36%33%38%37 This is "encrypted"; its decryption works out to http://www.searchv.com/

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Disabling Scripting
IE supports "scripting", a useful but dangerous capability that you will want to disable if you ever visit unknown sites. The scripts that can be run will be Javascript or VBScript, often embedded in a web page you visit. Such scripts can execute ActiveX controls, which can do anything in your machine that any software can do.

To be stop scripting the easy way, do this: From IE's top menu bar, select the Tools menu. On this menu, choose "Internet Options". It will display a popup dialog box. Click on the Security tab, to see a display like that to the right.

Each zone has four security levels available, ranging from Low Security to High. IE is configured for Low Security when it is first installed. Medium or High is what you need.

High (most secure) Exclude content that could damage your computer.
Medium (more secure) Warn before running potentially damaging content.
Medium-Low (Same as Medium) No warning before running potentially damaging content.
Low Minimal safeguard and warning before running potentially damaging content.
For the Internet Setting, move the slider to "Medium" This will ensure that you are prompted before signed ActiveX controls are run, and unsigned ActiveX controls will not run.

But it will still allow active scripting. So click on the "Custom Level" button, and follow these instructions:

Configure IE so that it does not run Active scripts automatically:
On the Tools menu, click Internet Options, click the Security tab, click the Internet Web content zone, and then click Custom Level.
In the Settings box, scroll down to the Scripting section, and click Disable under Active scripting and Scripting of Java applets.
Click OK, and then click OK again.
Configure IE so that it does not automatically use items that show active content, such as vertical marquees or animations:
On the Tools menu, click Internet Options, click the Security tab, click the Internet Web content zone, and then click Custom Level.
In the Settings box, click Disable under Download signed ActiveX controls, Download unsigned ActiveX controls, Initialize and script ActiveX controls not marked as safe, Run ActiveX controls and plugins, and Script ActiveX controls marked safe for scripting.
Click OK, and then click OK again.
Verify that IE's internal Java Just-In-Time (JIT) compiler is disabled:

On the Tools menu, click Internet Options, click the Advanced tab, and then click to clear the JIT compiler for virtual machine enabled (requires restart) check box under Java VM.
Click OK.
Configure IE so that it does not run Java programs automatically.
On the Tools menu, click Internet Options, click the Security tab, click the Internet Web content zone, and then click Custom Level.
In the Settings box, click Disable Java under Java Permissions, click OK and then click OK again.
If you have an earlier version of IE, please see How to Disable Active Content in Internet Explorer, from which this section is adapted.

http://www.pestpatrol.com/Support/Images/IE%20Security%20Setting.gif




Hope that helps you out Toronto (if u still can't read that, ur spyware in ur computer is very very powerful)

chipanggo
09-16-2004, 10:03 PM
i was using ad-aware before, but now i've switched to pest patrol. works great for me. i recommend you try it.