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Old 16-09-14, 07:50   #1
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Default A Step-By-Step Guide For Windows Clean-Up!

A Step-By-Step Guide For Windows Clean-Up!

Step 1: Kill the Lurkers

Before we can clean out your Windows system completely, we have to make sure that any of those oh-so-innocent-looking files sitting on your hard drive (that may not show up on anybody's radar) are not secretly lurking in the background, breathlessly waiting for the chance to pounce out of the shadows and reinfect you.

There are several variations on each of these steps, depending on which version of Windows you're running, which version of Internet Explorer you're running, etc. I'll hit the highlights, but your mileage may vary. Pay attention to the prompts and menu choices and you should be okay.

Before you start, just a word about running your computer as the Administrator. When you start your computer, you have to log in (many Windows systems do this automatically for you - more on this later). This lets you have multiple users on the same computer (not simultaneously).

If you're not running as Administrator normally, then you should log out, and log in as the Administrator ONLY to clean-up windows. If you have no idea what I'm talking about, or if your computer just starts up without asking you to log in, then you probably do run as the Administrator. You shouldn't, on a day-to-day basis.
Generally, it's best to not run as the Administrator. If you run as a regular user, viruses have a harder time infecting your computer. You should only run as the Administrator when you want to add or remove programs. But that's kind of beyond the scope of this page.

So... now that you're confused thoroughly, let's go!

Delete your Temporary Internet Files

When a Web browser (e.g., Internet Explorer) goes to a Web site, it saves a copy of each page on your hard drive. This is designed to enhance your browsing experience - the next time you go to that page, your browser checks to see if anything's changed; if not, it uses the old copy on your hard drive. This makes browsing to a site much faster, and cuts down on Internet traffic considerably. This is a great idea, but it means that if you've gone to a Web site with malware, a copy of that malware may well reside in the cache (those temporary Internet files). So let's get rid of 'em.

In Internet Explorer, click the Tools menu, then click on "Internet Options...," then click the "Delete Files" button in the "Temporary Internet Files" section. If you're using a newer version of Internet Explorer, you'll see a new box with an option to check to delete all stored offline content. You should do that. Click OK. The cursor will turn into the hour glass for a while, then come back. That's really all the indication you have that you've done it.

In Firefox, click the Tools menu, then click on Options...," then click on Privacy.
Click the Clear button next to Cookies.

Empty the Recycle Bin

Empty your Temp Files

In the same way that Internet Explorer saves temporary files on your hard drive, so does Windows itself. Often these are "scratchpad" files used by programs, and sloppy programmers have neglected to delete them. You should do so. Look for folders called TEMP or TMP (upper or lower case) on the C: drive at the root level (the base level of the drive) and empty them. Do the same with folders also named TEMP or TMP inside the Windows folders.
Sorry I can't be more specific than that; many manufacturers tweak Windows a bit before they send it out, and one of those tweaks is sometimes to change where the temporary files are kept.

You may get an error message or two at this step. There may be a program running that has a file opened in the Temp files directory, and you won't be able to remove that one. Also, there may be some folders you can't remove. You see, when Windows installs some programs, it puts files it uses all the time in the temporary directory. Yep. In either case, don't worry about it. Just move on to the next file, or decide you're done.

Reboot

I don't know that this step is strictly necessary, but I bow to the wisdom of it.
At any rate, it can't hurt.

Turn off System Restore

System Restore is designed to return the system to a known good state, in case you mess things up a bit. The problem is that many viruses nowadays lurk in the System Restore files, and if you do a Restore, immediately reinfect you!

Note that cleaning to this step results in the loss of all previous Restore Points.

If you really want to, you can turn it back on again afterwards, but you'll just be turning it off again the next time you clean-up, so what's the point?


Windows Vista

You must be logged in as an Administrator to do this. If you are not logged in as an Administrator, the System Restore tab will not be displayed. If you do not know how to log in as Administrator, contact your system administrator (if you are on a network), the computer manufacturer, or installer.

Click on the "Start" button in the lower left corner
Right-click on Computer, and select Properties from the drop-down list
Select "System Protection" on the right under "Tasks," and click "Continue"
Un-check all your drives - that will stop System Restore from working on those drives
Okay your way out


Windows XP (If your still using this...OMG!..dump it)

You must be logged in as an Administrator to do this. If you are not logged in as an Administrator, the System Restore tab will not be displayed. If you do not know how to log in as Administrator, contact your system administrator (if you are on a network), the computer manufacturer, or installer.

Right-click My Computer, and then click Properties from the drop-down list

(Depending on how your system was set up, you may have to click Start -> Programs ->
Accessories -> Windows Explorer to get to My Computer)

Click the System Restore tab

Check the "Turn off System Restore" or "Turn off System Restore on all drives" check box

Click Apply. A warning message appears, reiterating what I said above. Click Yes.
Click OK


*********Reboot

Well! That was quite a first step, wasn't it? (Watch out for that first step - it's a doozy!) And that was just the prep work! Don't worry - the rest of the steps, while time consuming, are not nearly so complex.
------------------------------------------------------------
Step 2: Download All Necessary Files


Shortly, we'll be rebooting into Safe Mode, which will cut off your Internet access. So first, we'll
download all of the software we need to install. You'll find out more about the individual files below, but for now, let's just download them.

Download rkill, which tries to stop malware from running so that they can be removed.
http://download.bleepingcomputer.com/grinler/rkill.exe

Download unhide, which tries to reveal programs that are trying to conceal themselves from being removed.
http://download.bleepingcomputer.com/grinler/unhide.exe
Download TDSSKiller, which tries to kill some very specific rootkits.
http://support.kaspersky.com/downloads/utils/tdsskiller.exe
Download the free versions of SuperAntiSpyware, and Malwarebytes' Anti-Malware. Once you've seen how great they are, you'll want to buy/crack the full versions, but for a first cleanup, you can use the free versions.
http://www.superantispyware.com/
You'll want an antivirus program. If you already have one, great. Update it and scan your entire
system right now. If you don't have one, download one of the ones on that menu there at the top. Many you have to pay for; AVG and avast! are free for personal use.

Next, you'll need a firewall. If you have Windows its set automatic, you have one. If you'd
rather, you can get a great firewall from the list on that infamous firewall top10's. Most of The
clean-up is designed to weed out infections that are already on your computer. What's better
is to block as many of them as possible before they even reach your computer! Firewalls help do that.
They stop traffic from coming into your computer via most of the known malicious back-doors and
rarely-open paths. If you have a small network at home, with a home router, it's possible that router includes a firewall, which will protect all of the computers in your network. If, however, you have only one computer, you should run a firewall on it. ZoneAlarm does have a free version, but, again, once you see how great it works, you'll want to get(or crack) the full version.

Last but not least, you should download Stinger. There are several versions on that page; you only need the first, general one. Stinger doesn't update very often; if the version you already have is the same as the one that you'd be downloading, you don't have to download it - just use the one you have.
http://www.mcafee.com/us/downloads/free-tools/stinger.aspx


------------------------------------------------



Step 3: Reboot into Safe Mode

Now we want to reboot into Safe Mode, where very little stuff is running in the background, and you're off the Internet. (Again, some systems don't do Safe Mode for various reasons - if you can't get into Safe Mode, don't worry - just keep on keepin' on) Click Start, click "Turn Off Computer" and click Restart.
As the system reboots, keep tapping the F8 key until you see a text menu. Select Safe Mode. When the system boots up, it may look VERY different from what you're used to. Don't panic! What's happened is this: Safe Mode loads an extremely minimal set of drivers. One of the drivers it does NOT load is your video driver - it sets the video card into the loweest common video mode: 640x480 and only 16 colors. Don't worry - when you reboot, it'll all be back to the way it was. Now, it's time to start running stuff!



Step Four: Clean Your Machine

First, we run rkill.

This program tries to stop malware that's already running. It doesn't always work, but when it does, it makes the rest of the software we'll be running just a little bit more effective.

Then, we run unhide

This program tries to reveal bad stuff that's hiding in your system.

Now we run TDSSKiller

There are some very stubborn root kits out there, and TDSSKiller will try to stop them so they can be removed.

Now we run Stinger.

This program, from McAfee is updated only very irregularly, but when it is, it means that a brand
new virus has been found that circumvents all the antivirus programs. You should run it every time, even though it's not really necessary every time. It takes very little time to run, and you'll be safer.

Now we move to your antivirus program. You must run a thorough scan on your system. Every antivirus program installs and runs a tad differently, so read the instructions that come with yours. The important thing to understand is that every antivirus program has two parts. There's the program itself (the "engine"), which searches your hard drive for infections, and there's the virus definitions, which the program uses to identify those viruses. Once we're done here, and reboot to regular Windows mode, you'll want to update your antivirus program again and run it again.

The engine rarely needs updating. But the definitions need to be updated regularly. Running with old definitions is like not running an antivirus program at all! Every antivirus program has a mechanism for updating the definitions. You should familiarize yourself with yours, and make certain that the definitions are updated regularly. Daily is not too often to update. Most days of the week, you won't get anything new, but those times you do will come in really handy!

SuperAntiSpyware is - you guessed it - yet another antispyware program. It handles some key loggers and hijackers better than some of the others. Yes, you have to update the virus definitions in the free version by hand; make sure you do that.

One more - MalWareBytes' Anti-Malware. As with the others, there are types of infections that it handles better. Again, make sure you update the virus definition database by hand each time.
http://www.malwarebytes.org/mbam.php
I know - it all seems so redundant. And most of the time it is. But that one time when each of these catch something different from the others, you'll be glad you ran them all.

Now it's time to install that firewall. Install the one you downloaded in Step Two, or just use the
one that came with Windows.
------------------------------------------
Step 4: Reboot and Do it Again

Once all of those have been installed and run, and you have gotten your machine as clean as possible, it's time to reboot and do it all over again! The reason for this is that, now that the system is pretty clean and protected, it's time to update all the programs (to make sure you're as protected as possible). Once you've updated them, of course, you'll want to run them again to make sure that you've cleaned out absolutely everything you can.

Reboot, and run clean-up in this order:

Rkill
Unhide
TDSSKiller
Stinger
SuperAntiSpyware (update it first)
Malwarebytes' Anti-Malware (update it first)
your antivirus program (update it f... oh, you know)
----------------------------------------
Step 5: Windows Update

If you're running a newer operating system, Windows Update may well be running in the background, and every once in a while will annoy you by notifying you that updates are ready to be installed. This is a Good Thing!
You should be able to set up automatic updating via your Control Panel - it'll be called either Windows Updates or Automatic Updates.

If you don't have that (e.g. you're running a very old version of Windows), you can still update from Internet Explorer. Click the Tools menu, then select "Windows Update." Always install all Critical patches; others my not suit you - read them carefully.

Yes, it's true that Microsoft has put out one or two updates that killed Windows entirely. You have to weigh the risk of being vulnerable to a known exploit vs. the very slim possibility of having to reinstall your system. You do have backups, don't you?

Remember: Anti-Malware's and your antivirus program's definitions must be updated every time you run them!

If you're not sure what you're doing, please take your system to a qualified professional to clean it!



Happy cleaning
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