Yes, or moves them to a "Virus Chest"
get a good virus scanner then delete the files that it says r infected or send them to people that u hate
If your Whole Computer got infected, you HAVE to delete all files, music, pictures, EVERYTHING. Permanently.
When you delete files that may be infected virus stays on the system by moving to another file. Formating deletes all files infected or not hence virus is delete because it has nowhere else to move to.
It goes in "Quarantine" in quarantine, the virus can't harm the computer, and you can go to quarantine, and it will have all of your infected files, and tell you the name of the virus that's infecting the file, and you can delete the infected files.
Anti-virus software program itself deletes the infected files after running the scan and detecting fault error files.
This really depends on the file. If you have a useless malicious file, such as a infected downloaded file, that has no system importance, then yes, it would be recommended to delete that file. However if it is a infected system file or other important file DON'T delete it. Leave it in the virus chest and see if it is possible to repair it.
first step, unhide the associated files in the folder then delete it manually, try to open every folder that you suspect infected with this virus then delete it manually. That's the only way, using all this anti-virus still no use, try it............
no is there a software to delete it
the file that you were deleting might be infected of a virus.
You are going to have to find the infected files delete them or easier format you computer. Otherwise do an online scan Have a good one m8
I had this same problem with a computer at work. AVG 7.0 wouldn't heal the infected files automatically or move them to the Virus Vault. I moved the infected files into the Virus Vault myself. You can do this in AVG. Once in the Vault, you can delete them. Don't delete if they are critical or actual system files. The infected files were simply temporary Internet files, but because they were in Windows\Temporary Internet Files\IE content (Windows98), they read as system files and AVG wouldn't touch them. I ran another couple of scans after doing this and the machine was clear. Hope this helps.
no not really because there are some other types of viruses that once infected a certain file it affects other files too such as program files. Might as well heal your PC with an updated anti virus software.