yes and no but yes if you want to have that data but you will have that virus on your computer
Jerusalemis a DOS virus first detected in Jerusalem, in October 1987. On infection, the Jerusalem virus becomes memory resident (using 2kb of memory), and then infects every executable file run, except for COMMAND.COM. .COM files grow by 1,813 bytes when infected by Jerusalem and are not re-infected. .EXE files grow by 1,808 to 1,823 bytes each time they are infected. The virus re-infects .EXE files each time the files are loaded until they are too large to load into memory. Some .EXE files are infected but do not grow because several overlays follow the genuine .EXE file in the same file. Sometimes .EXE files are incorrectly infected, causing the program to fail to run as soon as it is executed.
Deleting a virus from an infected file.
Yes, or moves them to a "Virus Chest"
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 need to get rid of the virus with a backup cd then you retrieve the files
If you burn infected files onto an optical disc then those files remain infected and would remain on the optical disc permanently.
The system is infected with virus. Please install any good anti virus and do a full system scan. Or, switch to Linux :)
get a good virus scanner then delete the files that it says r infected or send them to people that u hate
One product for removing a virus from an external hard drive is Malwarebytes Antimalware. Once the virus is removed, the files should reappear.
By files virus
Anti-virus software program itself deletes the infected files after running the scan and detecting fault error files.