F5F Stay Refreshed Hardware Desktop Use a specialized RAM cleaning solution and follow proper procedures to remove residues efficiently.

Use a specialized RAM cleaning solution and follow proper procedures to remove residues efficiently.

Use a specialized RAM cleaning solution and follow proper procedures to remove residues efficiently.

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FramezTheBest
Member
222
02-10-2016, 10:26 PM
#11
For peace of mind, perform a memtest before starting the operating system. This process writes data across all memory blocks, erasing any existing information. Note: I think this is unnecessary unless you're protecting highly sensitive data like nuclear missile codes.
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FramezTheBest
02-10-2016, 10:26 PM #11

For peace of mind, perform a memtest before starting the operating system. This process writes data across all memory blocks, erasing any existing information. Note: I think this is unnecessary unless you're protecting highly sensitive data like nuclear missile codes.

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Palmox
Member
134
02-18-2016, 05:22 AM
#12
The duration varies depending on the system and data being tested.
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Palmox
02-18-2016, 05:22 AM #12

The duration varies depending on the system and data being tested.

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HCFEotw
Member
132
02-18-2016, 06:40 AM
#13
a long time. I'll say again. it really isn't a problem. let's assume that there is malicious code in ram (since this seems to be the problem) it would need to be a) written to operate with the intent of being powered down and transferred to the new computer. b) be robust and effective enough to survive absolute near corruption, this would mean data replication across multiple DRAM chips, and some ability to piece everything back together. c) be able to execute instructions the moment it is powered on. this is such an obscenely difficult task that it is effectively impossible outside of specific controlled instances. edit: it is also likely that the malware would need to have previous knowledge about specific hardware.
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HCFEotw
02-18-2016, 06:40 AM #13

a long time. I'll say again. it really isn't a problem. let's assume that there is malicious code in ram (since this seems to be the problem) it would need to be a) written to operate with the intent of being powered down and transferred to the new computer. b) be robust and effective enough to survive absolute near corruption, this would mean data replication across multiple DRAM chips, and some ability to piece everything back together. c) be able to execute instructions the moment it is powered on. this is such an obscenely difficult task that it is effectively impossible outside of specific controlled instances. edit: it is also likely that the malware would need to have previous knowledge about specific hardware.

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Mitchelltb27
Member
152
02-18-2016, 02:26 PM
#14
I meant if virus were on HDD, but you power up system with RAM and data residue on it. Memtest solution is fine unless it takes long, otherwise I can just wait 15 minutes...
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Mitchelltb27
02-18-2016, 02:26 PM #14

I meant if virus were on HDD, but you power up system with RAM and data residue on it. Memtest solution is fine unless it takes long, otherwise I can just wait 15 minutes...

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PPS
Junior Member
4
02-23-2016, 08:08 PM
#15
This isn't the process you expected.
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PPS
02-23-2016, 08:08 PM #15

This isn't the process you expected.

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NinjaGAmer9000
Junior Member
10
02-23-2016, 09:06 PM
#16
The virus couldn't retrieve leftover data from RAM because the operating system likely isolated the program, preventing access. Power consumption shouldn't have helped either, so it probably wasn't the main issue.
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NinjaGAmer9000
02-23-2016, 09:06 PM #16

The virus couldn't retrieve leftover data from RAM because the operating system likely isolated the program, preventing access. Power consumption shouldn't have helped either, so it probably wasn't the main issue.

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Casper_KS
Member
113
02-24-2016, 05:00 PM
#17
I'll connect the HDD, I wasn't sure what you were referring to. Anyway, I'll attempt a power drain or run a memtest for peace of mind. Maybe wait about 15 minutes, even if it's unlikely I'll find any issues. Appreciate the help!
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Casper_KS
02-24-2016, 05:00 PM #17

I'll connect the HDD, I wasn't sure what you were referring to. Anyway, I'll attempt a power drain or run a memtest for peace of mind. Maybe wait about 15 minutes, even if it's unlikely I'll find any issues. Appreciate the help!

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Thekidcool
Junior Member
22
02-25-2016, 02:31 AM
#18
RAM struggles to maintain data even when powered on continuously. It must refresh the information (likely referred to as tRFC in timing). For those who are overly cautious, data can also be stored encrypted in RAM. AMD refers to this as SME.
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Thekidcool
02-25-2016, 02:31 AM #18

RAM struggles to maintain data even when powered on continuously. It must refresh the information (likely referred to as tRFC in timing). For those who are overly cautious, data can also be stored encrypted in RAM. AMD refers to this as SME.

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miguel80
Member
80
03-16-2016, 12:19 AM
#19
It's highly unlikely your phone would be affected by such a virus, as it would be reported immediately by major security companies worldwide.
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miguel80
03-16-2016, 12:19 AM #19

It's highly unlikely your phone would be affected by such a virus, as it would be reported immediately by major security companies worldwide.

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SkyLIKE1
Member
174
03-18-2016, 11:17 AM
#20
No need, just for piece of mind, if I can completely clear data in RAM between restarts that would be fine Oh ok, thanks
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SkyLIKE1
03-18-2016, 11:17 AM #20

No need, just for piece of mind, if I can completely clear data in RAM between restarts that would be fine Oh ok, thanks

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