This is the free Microsoft anti-virus line. This is a totally free service that will walk you through the virus removal steps: For support within the United States and Canada, call toll-free (866) PCSAFETY (727-2338).
The 1st thing, you need to do, is getting your Norton Antivirus uptodate. After you done that, start your computer in Save Mode and do a complete system-scan with your Norton Virusscanner. Good luck, Jahewi :-)
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..
According to Norton, Norton antivirus does not conflict with my windows firewall.
This is the free Microsoft anti-virus line. This is a totally free service that will walk you through the virus removal steps: For support within the United States and Canada, call toll-free (866) PCSAFETY (727-2338).
Boot from another drive
Yes, every Norton product to date supports Windows 7 x32 and x64bit systems.
No Norton Ghost 12.0 is not compatible with windows 2003 server you can know that by trying to install it on windows 2003 server it will refuse
Downloader is an old virus, but a brand new variant just hit the streets: Downloader-AYB. Is that the one that got you? Have you tried booting to DOS (Command Prompt) and renaming the file before booting into Windows?
norton sucks. Use avast! antivirus 4.8
Start up in safe mode. Then open the folder windows\system 32 and locate the kerberos.exe right click and do an antivirus scan. followed by qaurantining it. reboot and rescan. Bobs ur auntie
Windows backup. Windows will better protect your files because it knows where all the needed files are for backup. However, Norton is also great for this type of thing.
If Your Norton is not deleteing viruses, then you will need to delete norton and reinstall and update it through the norton updates then run it. If you do this you should be able to then delete the viruses, if this does not work, you will need to format and reload windows.