![]() ![]() (Its relatively easy to guess as the probability of a Windows system getting infected is much more higher than a Unix System). already present in their systems, infects her pen drive as well. ![]() So, as she mentions, all of her friends are Windows users I guess as soon as she plugs in the drive in their system, these, Trojans/viruses etc. (They are programmed/written such way to remain hidden in Windows, so that they can propagate further), but can't stay same in Unix. There is also very less probability (rather no way if you ask me) that they can remain hidden by default in any Unix based system. As soon as you put them inside a foreign environment like Ubuntu, they can't get executed by themselves and remain in a docile state. programmed for windows environment are generally of. You see, these Trojans, viruses, Malwares etc. So, if you have a a solution apart of those two and keeping in mind my lack of CD drive, then your advice would be very much appreciated.īased upon my logical inference, I have reached to a conclusion (I might be wrong) that since (in her own words) she only sees what she put on those drives, IMHO, i don't think her system/Linux is any how infected. Since that day, I simply hate ClamAV as I am convinced that it erases even good and clean files and all it does is just a mess. I have used it in the spring to scan a Windows partition (on a dual boot PC) and the result was a total mess and I had to reinstall both operational systems again. My mother's PC runs Windows XP but is an old PC, tricky and unreliable because it falls all the time.ĬlamAV is not an option for me as I have a very bad experience related to it. I don't think that using a Windows system to scan them is a good solution, although it might sound to be the easiest and most obvious. So I really need to keep my flash drives clean just in case. So, I can't go to them and, unwillingly, "flood" their systems with viruses instead of helping them. Yesterday I have plugged in several of my flash drives on a freshly installed Windows XP system with an up-to-date Avast! Antivirus on it, and the antivisrus has discovered a dizzying number of viruses on my flash drives! While this doesn't affect me, it may affect others, because all of my friends are Windows users and they always call me to help them solve PC-related problems. But now I have become unaware of the possible viruses that can be "stored" on it. I use a lot of flash drives to store data, and I have used it since my "Windows times". So I don't need to scan my Windows partition from Ubuntu neither I can use any Antivirus CD like some people recommend. Apart from the other users, I don't have a Windows partition on my netbook (yes, I am a newbie but I had the courage to "forget" about Windows) and I don't have any CD-RW drive on it. I know that maybe it sounds like a duplicate but it isn't because I see that the other questions describe totally different situations than mine. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |