Author Topic: Why did you remove the Repair Shortcut button?  (Read 4126 times)

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June 03, 2015, 03:40:01 AM

sapitron

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Why did you remove the Repair Shortcut button?
« on: June 03, 2015, 03:40:01 AM »
I have an usb drive infected with some kind of malware that creates shortcuts of all my folders.
After scanning with RogueKiller, nothing happened, and the folders are still in shortcut mode.
help!


+++++ PhysicalDrive2: Kingston DTR30G2 USB Device +++++
--- User ---
[MBR] 38808a7037319e01c7b6e706df834f9a
[BSP] 8e5fa8528f0a1138f1507479d657c452 : Windows XP MBR Code
Partition table:
0 - [ACTIVE] NTFS (0x7) [VISIBLE] Offset (sectors): 8064 | Size: 59996 MB [Windows Vista/7/8 Bootstrap | Windows Vista/7/8 Bootloader]
User = LL1 ... OK
Error reading LL2 MBR! ([32] Solicitud no compatible. )


Reply #1June 03, 2015, 12:47:00 PM

Curson

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Re: Why did you remove the Repair Shortcut button?
« Reply #1 on: June 03, 2015, 12:47:00 PM »
Hi sapitron,

Welcome to Adlice.com Forum.
The "Repair Shortcut button" was not useful for this purpose.

Please connect all your USB devices and download Malwarebytes Anti-Malware and save it to your desktop.
  • Double-click on the setup file (mbam-setup.exe), then click on Run to install.
    Malwarebytes will automatically open to it's Dashboard. If you have never run this version, you should see a red note at the top indicating "A scan has never been run on your system".
  • Click on Update Now to download the current database definitions, then click the Scan Now button.
    If you have run this version before, you should see a green note at the top indicating "Your system is fully protected".
In the "Custom Scan" section, check all your drives, then click on the "Scan now" buton.
When the scan has completed, the results will be displayed. Click on Quarantine All, then click on Apply Actions.

To complete any actions taken you will be prompted to restart your computer...click on Yes.
Failure to reboot normally will prevent Malwarebytes from removing all the malware.

After rebooting the computer, copy and past the mbam.log in your next reply.

To retrieve the scan log information (Method 1) :
  • Open Malwarebytes Anti-Malware.
  • Click the History Tab at the top and select Application Logs.
  • Select the box next to Scan Log. Choose the most current scan.
  • Click the Export button and save the log as a .txt file on your Desktop or another location.
  • Be sure to post the complete log to include the top portion which shows MBAM's database version and your operating system.
To retrieve the scan log information (Method 2) :
  • Open Malwarebytes Anti-Malware.
  • Click the Scan Tab at the top.
  • Click the View detailed log link on the right.
  • Click the Export button and save the log as a .txt file on your Desktop or another location.
  • Be sure to post the complete log to include the top portion which shows MBAM's database version and your operating system.
Alternatively, logs are named by the date of scan in the following format: mbam-log-yyyy-mm-dd and automatically saved to the following locations:
  • -- XP: C:\Documents and Settings\<Username>\Application Data\Malwarebytes\Malwarebytes Anti-Malware\Logs\mbam-log-yyyy-mm-dd
  • -- Vista, Windows 7/8: C:\ProgramData\Malwarebytes\Malwarebytes Anti-Malware\Logs\mbam-log-yyyy-mm-dd
Regards.