Archive for November, 2010
Win Defrag (WinDefrag) Removal Instructions
Win Defrag (WinDefrag) is the same optimization tool as more than 10 other hard drive and system defragmenters. In the other words, the name is a new entry to the family of pretended system utilities. According to their description, their mission has multiple directions, of which junk files cleaning, hard drive errors fixing and deletion [...]
Remove Vista Internet Security and its prompt installer
Installers of Vista Internet Security are upgraded, in many instances, even prompter than good antivirus tools, needless to say of patches for Windows vulnerabilities. As long as hackers succeed to win a significant number of cases in this competition, even users of protected computer will keep receiving the adware installed by the backdoor droppers. However, [...]
Remove Win 7 Antimalware fake security software
It is easy to get drowned in the endless flow of advertisement produced by the adware. Both online ads and popups shown by the internal advertiser attempt to lure users into investing into malware author accounts. Basically, the trickery goes as follows: on the first stage, the computer system is getting a copy of installed [...]
WinHDD (Win HDD scareware) Removal Instructions
Copies of the adware are available at numerous websites. In many instances, they are uploaded as something else. In this case, the adware arrives under the guise of content that a user has tried to get for free. It is a direct trojan method of installation. That is an atypical method of propagation for such [...]
HDD Control Removal Instructions
“Oops I did it again! “– hackers perhaps exclaimed as they did that again changing the name of malicious self-advertising program code or rather adding new name to the list of names already used to designate fake system optimization software. HDD Control (HDDControl) detection was reported just in a few days after Check Disk. With [...]
Remove Vz.exe as another kernel of the fake Windows Update
Vz.exe is another system name for rogue antispyware of multiple names. Originally, hackers used pw.exe as a system name for rogue antispyware that pretended to be a Windows update installed automatically, i.e. by the host computer itself. In reality, the situation is a bit different. There is a program that arrives as a Trojan. Its [...]


