See its Path in norton window . Access it via DOS and use DELete command if you dont know how to use delete command in dos use this command to understand the syntax delete /? You need to run these 5 essential steps to remove all the spyware on your computer.
1. Run Deckard's System Scanner (DSS)
2. Run Malwarebytes Anti-Malware
3. Run the anti spyware removal programs spybot
4 Run Superantispyware
5. Run a complete scan with free curing utility Dr.Web CureIt!
Install threat fire which will enhance your antivirus protection
Go to My Computer>C>Program Files and in there find a folder related to your old anti-virus program. I.e. Norton, Symantec, etc. In this folder there should be another folder called Quarantine. Single click on the quarantine file, hold down shift on your keyboard and hit the delete key. This will permanently delete the folder, including all of the quarantined files inside.
Just use 'Search' to find the file and then delete it from the file/folder.
It will be deleted from the system in which it was found, unless it has infected a important file. Then the file will be healed.
The IED.EXE file is stored in a CAB (compressed cabinet file) usually held in the tempory internet files folder. Because the file is stored within another, Norton cannot repair or delete the file. Removal is simply a case of locating the CAB file specified by Norton and deleting it. I recently had my W98 box upgraded to XP Pro SP2. During this process I also had most of my old files transferred over. I guess one of these must have been infected bacause after running Norton AV (latest virus pack), it found the infected file "ied.exe" in a cabinet file "ied_s7m.cab" in the root directory of my c: drive. Yes, Norton could not fix, quarantine, or delete this file,..so I did what seems to be the concensus,..I deleted it. (I took a route that also seems to have some support, rather than just draging and dropping,..I started up in safe-mode, then dragged and dropped it,....which in retrospect doesn't any different than doing it during a usual startup) Haven't had any problems as of yet, i.e., the .cab file doesn't seem to be necessary nor is it linked with the registry in some way that my deleting it is causing problems....
Bloodhound isn't necessarily a virus. If Norton's "Bloodhound" technology finds a suspicious piece of code in a file it names it something like "Bloodhound.exploit.13" or similar. Remember Norton have a vested interest in frightening people. It can't remove it because it probably isn't a virus. Download free Antivirus software from Grisoft.com or www.free-av.com or similar and see if the virus still appears. You can delete the file yourself hold down shift and press delete in Windows explorer when the file is highlighted or leave it in quarantine.blood houndBloodhound is not the name of a virus, but a message displayed by Symantec's Norton Anti-Virus when it thinks it may have found a new virus. 9/10 times it is nothing.... Sometimes it is picking up a vulnerability that a windows update covers..
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.
You cant
You cant unless you delete your own file and make a new one. (>'_'<)
no, there is only one file and you cant delete it.
Go on to delete
In case your computer got infected, try the following:Get an antivirus program (if you don't have one already)Update your antivirusScan all your computer and delete, repair or quarantine the infected files.
u cant. u have to delete the first file in order to create another one.