• We’re currently investigating an issue related to the forum theme and styling that is impacting page layout and visual formatting. The problem has been identified, and we are actively working on a resolution. There is no impact to user data or functionality, this is strictly a front-end display issue. We’ll post an update once the fix has been deployed. Thanks for your patience while we get this sorted.

PE FUNLOVE

madhorsey

Junior Member
Hello Everyone and Anyone...

Surely many of you are famaliar with PE_FUNLOVE..... It is neither FUN nor LOVELY. It has been giving me headache for a few days now. I have been following numerous advious from numerous Anti Virus ventor, use their recommened patch...etc... They all work well for a few hrs. Most of my Machines I clean get reinfected in a few hrs. This includes the ones that we FDisk, FOrmat and reinstalled.

I have now given up with Professional advices.... I now rely on "Atmatures"... After all, we're the ones who don't follow any rules.


If any have any advise....PLEASE PLEASE PRETTY PLEASE .... HELP!!!!
 
Did you make absolutely sure that none of the machines can access other machines (using shared Drives)? The virus spreads by scanning the local network for shared drives and infecting executable files.
 
I remove every single share before I reconnet them onto the network... Some suggested that I should not reconnect untill everyone is cleaned. It is kind of impossible if you have a network that covers nearly the whole country
 
Originally posted by: madhorsey
I remove every single share before I reconnet them onto the network... Some suggested that I should not reconnect untill everyone is cleaned. It is kind of impossible if you have a network that covers nearly the whole country

Are you talking about the client machines here, or the server machines? If a server machine has been compromised, then the virus will infect the client again very quickly. What kind of a firewall do you have running? You should disable the client machines from opening listening connections so that the clients can only open out-bound connections and are unable to operate in a listening mode.

You need to ID the infected machines ASAP and remove them from the network.
 
Check *every* Windows (or potentially infected) machine for the virus. If it is found, format and reinstall before reconnecting it to the network. Anti-virus software is definitely a good idea.
 
Back
Top