ب [كريستوفر]

كيف أن يزيل [أنتيفيروس] بيتيّ شخصيّة

سبتمبر - أيلول محيّن 30, 2009

بيتيّ شخصيّة [أنتيفيروس] [سكرينشوت] [أنتيفيروس] بيتيّ شخصيّة [ملور] [بوشي] يرتدى حتّى نظرة مثل [رل سكريتي] برنامج. هو يتسلّل داخل ك يستعصي إدارة وحدة دفع, بعد ذلك أنات و [بولّيس] أنت إلى أن يوافق أنت أن [هند وفر] نقد أن "ينشّط نسختك من [أنتيفيروس] بيتيّ شخصيّة." لا فكرة جيّدة.

يحضر البرنامج يشبع [توولبوإكس] من [سكرور] تكتيكات, بما في ذلك [أنتيفيروس] بيتيّ شخصيّة [بوب-وبس], جدار مانع للحريق معوقات, وتمويه مسح أنّ يبدي [مد-وب] أمن تهديدات. هو يفتح [إفري تيم] يبدأ أنت حاسوبك, وهو [نغس] أنت إلى أن هو يحصل طريقه.

لا مروحة من غليظة, ضيفات [مون-هونغري] الذي لا يعرف متى أن يترك أنت بانفراد? أنا سأبدي أنت كيف أن يزيل [أنتيفيروس] بيتيّ شخصيّة, لحرّة.

حصلت يخلّص من [أنتيفيروس] بيتيّ شخصيّة

أنت تتلقّى [أنتيفيروس] بيتيّ شخصيّة?

عندما أعديت أنت مع [بدور] - ما إذا هو [أنتيفيروس] شخصيّة إلى البيت, [سبور], [أدور], [تروجن], أو حمى - هناك [ا فو] أعراض أساسيّة. تتلقّى أنت يلاحظ…

  • [كمبوتر برفورمنس] بطيئة: يحبّ هو لقطات صحيحة واحدة طفيلية [أنتيفيروس] بيتيّ شخصيّة أن يتمهّل حاسوبك بشكل مثير. إن [بك] ك يأخذ طويلا من معتادة إلى [ربووت], أو إن ك إنترنت توصيل يكون بشكل غير عاديّ بطيء, أنت يمكن كنت أعديت مع [أنتيفيروس] بيتيّ شخصيّة.
  • طريق مختصر جديدة مكتبيّة أو يحوّل [هومبج]: [بدور] مثل [أنتيفيروس] بيتيّ شخصيّة يمكن غيّرت ك إنترنت عمليّة إعداد أن يعيد [هومبج] ك إلى آخر موقعة. [بدور] يضيف علبة حتّى طريق مختصر مكتبيّة إلى [بك] ك.
  • [بوبوبس] مزعجة: [بدور] يستطيع قصفت حاسوبك مع [بوبوب] [أد], [إفن وهن] ليس أنت متوفّر على شبكة الإنترنات. من خلال هذا [بوبوبس], أنت يمكن كنت خدعت داخل يجلب كثير [سبور].

كيف أن يزيل [أنتيفيروس] بيضيّة شخصيّة يدويّا

Home Personal Antivirus warning Before we get started, you should backup your system and your registry, so it’ll be easy to restore your computer if anything goes wrong.

To remove Home Personal Antivirus manually, you need to delete Home Personal Antivirus files. Not sure how to delete Home Personal Antivirus files? Click here, and I’ll show you. Otherwise, go ahead and…

Stop Home Personal Antivirus processes:

%UserProfile%\Desktop\Home Personal Antivirus\homeav.exe
%UserProfile%\Desktop\Home Personal Antivirus\unistall.exe

Remove Home Personal Antivirus registry values:

HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\Home Personal Antivirus
HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Uninstall\Home Personal Antivirus
HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Run “HomeAV”

Remove Home Personal Antivirus DLLs:

%UserProfile%\Desktop\Home Personal Antivirus\BtCoreIf64.dll
%UserProfile%\Desktop\Home Personal Antivirus\msvcm80.dll
%UserProfile%\Desktop\Home Personal Antivirus\msvcp80.dll
%UserProfile%\Desktop\Home Personal Antivirus\msvcr80.dll
%UserProfile%\Desktop\Home Personal Antivirus\null_antivirus.dll
%UserProfile%\Desktop\Home Personal Antivirus\pthreadVC2.dll

Delete Home Personal Antivirus files:

%UserProfile%\Desktop\Home Personal Antivirus.LNK
%UserProfile%\Desktop\Home Personal Antivirus\Microsoft.VC80.CRT.manifest
%UserProfile%\Desktop\Home Personal Antivirus\vdb\daily.zvd
%UserProfile%\Start Menu\Home Personal Antivirus.LNK

Get rid of Home Personal Antivirus folders:

%UserProfile%\Desktop\Home Personal Antivirus
%UserProfile%\Desktop\Home Personal Antivirus\vdb

Note: In any Home Personal Antivirus files I mention above, “%UserProfile%” is a variable referring to your current user’s profile folder. If you’re using Windows NT/2000/XP, by default this is “C:\Documents and Settings\[CURRENT USER]” (e.g., “C:\Documents and Settings\JoeSmith”). If you have any questions about manual Home Personal Antivirus removal, go ahead and leave a comment.

How Do You Remove Home Personal Antivirus Files?

Need help figuring out how to delete Home Personal Antivirus files? While there’s some risk involved, and you should only manually remove Home Personal Antivirus files if you’re comfortable editing your system, you’ll find it’s fairly easy to delete Home Personal Antivirus files in Windows.

How to delete Home Personal Antivirus files in Windows XP and Vista:

  1. Click your Windows Start menu, and then click “Search.”
  2. A speech bubble will pop up asking you, “What do you want to search for?” Click “All files and folders.”
  3. Type a Home Personal Antivirus file in the search box, and select “Local Hard Drives.”
  4. Click “Search.” Once the file is found, delete it.

How to stop Home Personal Antivirus processes:

  1. Click the Start menu, select Run.
  2. Type taskmgr.exe into the the Run command box, and click “OK.” You can also launch the Task Manager by pressing keys CTRL + Shift + ESC.
  3. Click Processes tab, and find Home Personal Antivirus processes.
  4. Once you’ve found the Home Personal Antivirus processes, right-click them and select “End Process” to kill Home Personal Antivirus.

How to remove Home Personal Antivirus registry keys:

Home Personal Antivirus warning Because your registry is such a key piece of your Windows system, you should always backup your registry before you edit it. Editing your registry can be intimidating if you’re not a computer expert, and when you change or a delete a critical registry key or value, there’s a chance you may need to reinstall your entire system. Make sure your backup your registry before editing it.

  1. Select your Windows menu “Start,” and click “Run.” An “Open” field will appear. Type “regedit” and click “OK” to open up your Registry Editor.
  2. Registry Editor will open as a window with two panes. The left side Registry Editor’s window lets you select various registry keys, and the right side displays the registry values of the registry key you select.
  3. To find a registry key, such as any Home Personal Antivirus registry keys, select “Edit,” then select “Find,” and in the search bar type any of Home Personal Antivirus’s registry keys.
  4. As soon as Home Personal Antivirus registry key appears, you can delete the Home Personal Antivirus registry key by right-clicking it and selecting “Modify,” then clicking “Delete.”

How to delete Home Personal Antivirus DLL files:

  1. First locate Home Personal Antivirus DLL files you want to delete. Open your Windows Start menu, then click “Run.” Type “cmd” in Run, and click “OK.”
  2. To change your current directory, type “cd” in the command box, press your “Space” key, and enter the full directory where the Home Personal Antivirus DLL file is located. If you’re not sure if the Home Personal Antivirus DLL file is located in a particular directory, enter “dir” in the command box to display a directory’s contents. To go one directory back, enter “cd ..” in the command box and press “Enter.”
  3. When you’ve located the Home Personal Antivirus DLL file you want to remove, type “regsvr32 /u SampleDLLName.dll” (e.g., “regsvr32 /u jl27script.dll”) and press your “Enter” key.

That’s it. If you want to restore any Home Personal Antivirus DLL file you removed, type “regsvr32 DLLJustDeleted.dll” (e.g., “regsvr32 jl27script.dll”) into your command box, and press your “Enter” key.

Did Home Personal Antivirus change your homepage?

  1. Click Windows Start menu > Control Panel > Internet Options.
  2. Under Home Page, select the General > Use Default.
  3. Type in the URL you want as your home page (e.g., “http://www.homepage.com”).
  4. Select Apply > OK.
  5. You’ll want to open a fresh web page and make sure that your new default home page pops up.

Home Personal Antivirus Removal Tip

Is your computer acting funny after deleting any Home Personal Antivirus files? I recommend using a program like File Recover from PC Tools. File Recover saves deleted files that otherwise can’t be recovered by Windows operating sytem.

Want to save time finding Home Personal Antivirus files? Download Spyware Doctor, let it find the Home Personal Antivirus files for you, and then manually delete Home Personal Antivirus files.

How Did You Get Home Personal Antivirus?

Wondering how Home Personal Antivirus ended up on your PC? If you’re infected with Home Personal Antivirus or other badware, perhaps you were using…

  • Freeware or shareware: Did you download and install shareware or freeware? These low-cost or free software applications may come bundled with spyware, adware, or programs like Home Personal Antivirus. Sometimes adware is attached to the free software to “pay” developers for the cost of creating the software, and more often spyware is secretly attached to free software to harm your computer and steal your personal and financial information.
  • Peer-to-peer software: Do you use a peer-to-peer (P2P) program or other application with a shared network? When you use these applications, you put your system at risk for unknowingly downloading an infected file, including applications like Home Personal Antivirus.
  • Questionable websites: Did you visit a website that’s of questionable nature? When you visit malicious sites that are fishy and phishy, badware may be automatically downloaded and installed onto your computer, sometimes including applications like Home Personal Antivirus. I recommend you use Firefox web browser, if you don’t already.

Understanding Home Personal Antivirus

If you’re infected with Home Personal Antivirus, you should know what you’re fighting. I’ll explain some definitions related to Home Personal Antivirus.

Home Personal Antivirus May Be Rogue Anti-Spyware

Rogue anti-spyware refers to anti-spyware/antivirus software of questionable value. Rogue anti-spyware may not be proven to protect your computer from spyware, may popup fake alerts or create many false positives about your PC being infected, or may use scare tactics to try to get you to purchase the application. Rogue anti-spyware software may be installed by a Trojan, come bundled with other software, or install itself through web browser security holes. While it is fairly rare, some rogue anti-spyware is created and distributed by known spyware or adware companies, and the rogue anti-spyware may install spyware or adware itself.

Often when you’re infected with rogue anti-spyware like Home Personal Antivirus, you’ll see a false popup security alert like this:

Home Personal Antivirus  popup

Rogue Anti-Spyware Tactics

Typically, rogue anti-spyware such as Home Personal Antivirus has one or more of the qualities listed below, which is why rogue anti-spyware is considered anti-spyware software of questionable value.

  • False positives/fake alerts: Rogue anti-spyware may produce a large number of false positives or use fake alerts, noting that your computer is infected with spyware parasites or other threats that do not really exist.
  • Copycat looks: Rogue anti-spyware may copy the look and feel of other legitimate or rogue anti-spyware applications. Often, rogue anti-spyware applications may appear as close clones of other rogue anti-spyware software.
  • High pressure marketing: Rogue anti-spyware may use scare tactics or other aggressive advertising and marketing tactics to try to trick you into buying the rogue anti-spyware application. Often, rogue anti-spyware may produce false positives and fake alerts about your computer being infected.
  • Poor detection/scan reporting: Rogue anti-spyware may produce poor reports when it scans your PC. For example, rogue anti-spyware may say your computer is infected 11 parasites, but not specify which spyware parasites or what type of parasites. Rogue anti-spyware may also report that your PC is infected with SafeAndClean, but not tell you which related files, DLLS, etc. were found on your computer.
  • Weak scanning/detection: Rogue anti-spyware may not only poorly report on computer infection, but rogue antispyware may also poorly scan your PC. Rogue anti-spyware may skip over important folders and files of your computer that should be scanned to detect spyware.

Did Home Personal Antivirus use these tactics to trick you into buying Home Personal Antivirus?