F5F Stay Refreshed Software Operating Systems Most severe viral problem I've resolved involved cleaning up a stubborn infection.

Most severe viral problem I've resolved involved cleaning up a stubborn infection.

Most severe viral problem I've resolved involved cleaning up a stubborn infection.

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HeadDiamond12
Member
54
06-16-2025, 12:13 PM
#1
Recently I helped a coworker fix a slow Gateway laptop infected with malware. It was still running despite having 611 viruses and 674 registry errors. I became curious about the most severe infections people have faced before.
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HeadDiamond12
06-16-2025, 12:13 PM #1

Recently I helped a coworker fix a slow Gateway laptop infected with malware. It was still running despite having 611 viruses and 674 registry errors. I became curious about the most severe infections people have faced before.

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Hooded_Master
Member
187
06-19-2025, 05:32 PM
#2
It was my sibling's outdated computer. It had a lot more than 1,000 corrupt files and other issues.
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Hooded_Master
06-19-2025, 05:32 PM #2

It was my sibling's outdated computer. It had a lot more than 1,000 corrupt files and other issues.

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ItzHayds_
Member
119
06-21-2025, 02:31 PM
#3
I was chatting with a friend, showing him how to eliminate malware since his computer was running very slowly. He used MalwareBytes and found about 2,070 items detected.
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ItzHayds_
06-21-2025, 02:31 PM #3

I was chatting with a friend, showing him how to eliminate malware since his computer was running very slowly. He used MalwareBytes and found about 2,070 items detected.

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Seve_PT
Member
229
06-25-2025, 09:48 AM
#4
My mom, I should have noticed something was off when I started it and Internet Explorer opened on its own to warn me about an infection. There were tons of toolbars that caused it to crash, then it would reopen saying the same thing. Nothing could fix it from space, but eventually it just showed all the pictures and sounds again.
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Seve_PT
06-25-2025, 09:48 AM #4

My mom, I should have noticed something was off when I started it and Internet Explorer opened on its own to warn me about an infection. There were tons of toolbars that caused it to crash, then it would reopen saying the same thing. Nothing could fix it from space, but eventually it just showed all the pictures and sounds again.

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MCphoenix99
Junior Member
39
06-26-2025, 12:43 AM
#5
Removing malware and dust from a basic 2-person laptop linked to a Club Penguin account.
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MCphoenix99
06-26-2025, 12:43 AM #5

Removing malware and dust from a basic 2-person laptop linked to a Club Penguin account.

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senbonzakura13
Senior Member
372
07-01-2025, 07:03 PM
#6
That was probably your first hint.
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senbonzakura13
07-01-2025, 07:03 PM #6

That was probably your first hint.

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levoyageur92
Posting Freak
807
07-11-2025, 09:35 AM
#7
on my previous laptop, there was a virus that locked my computer, so I needed to pay using a Green Dot card to regain access. After reformatting the hard drive, I ran Malwarebytes and discovered around 200 infected files.
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levoyageur92
07-11-2025, 09:35 AM #7

on my previous laptop, there was a virus that locked my computer, so I needed to pay using a Green Dot card to regain access. After reformatting the hard drive, I ran Malwarebytes and discovered around 200 infected files.

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duhazneubin
Senior Member
583
07-13-2025, 09:07 AM
#8
I also like Malwarebytes. It’s my go-to tool. But honestly, that program should not have been able to start.
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duhazneubin
07-13-2025, 09:07 AM #8

I also like Malwarebytes. It’s my go-to tool. But honestly, that program should not have been able to start.

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m0deYT
Member
144
07-14-2025, 10:51 PM
#9
A few years back, a student from my high school planned to install the Crypolocker malware on a library computer. Most of the school’s files were encrypted—student assignments, report cards, and grades. The school board spent $2700 to decrypt them and then upgraded the security system.
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m0deYT
07-14-2025, 10:51 PM #9

A few years back, a student from my high school planned to install the Crypolocker malware on a library computer. Most of the school’s files were encrypted—student assignments, report cards, and grades. The school board spent $2700 to decrypt them and then upgraded the security system.

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Flundi
Member
231
07-14-2025, 11:34 PM
#10
That’s a significant issue compared to what someone I know experienced. He introduced a virus causing the Macs in the library to repeatedly display Waffles on the screen and print them everywhere on the paper.
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Flundi
07-14-2025, 11:34 PM #10

That’s a significant issue compared to what someone I know experienced. He introduced a virus causing the Macs in the library to repeatedly display Waffles on the screen and print them everywhere on the paper.

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