Published on August 13, 2009 By Fuzzy Logic In Personal Computing

I've just had a brush with numerous viruses, the first I've had in years. I was browsing some free software sites (can't remember which, I was just following links), when I got a warning about a dodgy web page. Next thing I know AVG is popping up with all sorts of messages about trojans and viruses. At this point my pc is locked solid, so, rather than repair the damage, I decide to restore from backup...

Shutdown Windows: seconds - I pressed the off button!

Search for Drive Image 7 disc: 2 minutes - it was buried under some papers...

Boot into Drive Image: 4 minutes

Restore image: 5 mins 55 secs

Boot into Windows: 50 secs

So, up and running again in next to no time. Shows the value of good backups

As the backup is a few days old, I've lost some game saves - but that is only because of Microsofts insistance that programmers store program info locally instead of with the game (I have my games on a seperate partition). Everything else is as it was.


Comments (Page 1)
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on Aug 13, 2009

Now see?  If you didn't have an anti-virus, you'd have been just fine!

on Aug 13, 2009

As the backup is a few days old, I've lost some game saves - but that is only because of Microsofts insistance that programmers store program info locally instead of with the game (I have my games on a seperate partition). Everything else is as it was.

its a damage mitigation issue- the idea is that everything in program files never gets modified during normal use, and as such that any unapproved modifications there are immediately suspect.

on Aug 13, 2009

Always a good idea to do backups, I try to do one once a week.

Fuzzy 1 , dumb ass virus sites 0

 

on Aug 13, 2009

Yes actually MS' idea is a good one, as crashmatusow said installed data normally doesn't change, and if it does it could indicate malware. Also, having multiple users on the same PC doesn't make saving user specific files in the data folder a pretty solution. Hence they opt for everyone storing their files in the profile folder, which is a decent solution if you ask me, Linux does it the same way (sorta).

The problem is that above method does not take partitions into consideration. I too use a different partition for all my games (I got a fast hard drive for them). Non OS partitions are usually quite save from malware, so they could easily store your saves on there too. Combine above problem with the problem that most game studios don't offer a choice where to store your saved files - the user profile as default is fine but I'd love a choice to select an alternative folder - and you are screwed in this case.

Is this a bad thing, is it Microsoft's fault? Not really. Microsoft does quite a lot to keep malware out the door and above solution is one of them. Nowadays you have to do some pretty dodgy stuff to get a virus to begin with. Backing up your profile folder is pretty simple, you'll have all the stuff you need to keep stored in a central place. Also if your hard drive crashes you may lose all your profile data but if saved games are stored in the game folder and that hard drive crashes you'd have the same problem.

on Aug 13, 2009

It would make perfect sense, if we didn't all turn off the nag screen that pops up when someone alters the program files...

on Aug 13, 2009

If you were running Linux or a Mac it never would have happend. Just saying...

on Aug 13, 2009

If you were running Linux or a Mac it never would have happend. Just saying...
I've killed many a Mac in my day. (Not on purpose.)

 

on Aug 13, 2009

kona0197
If you were running Linux or a Mac it never would have happend. Just saying...

If you think there are no virii in those worlds you are incredibly naive...

 

 

on Aug 13, 2009

If you were running Linux or a Mac it never would have happend. Just saying...

on Aug 13, 2009

I you think there are no virii in those worlds you are incredibly naive...

There were over 900 for Linux about 3 years back, would hate to think what its up to now.

on Aug 13, 2009

...and if trolls were banned, threads wouldn't get derailled...

on Aug 13, 2009

I'm NO troll.

on Aug 13, 2009

Really? This was a thread about a virus I had, backups, games etc. That is until you came along, again with your Linux/Mac shit and hijacked the thread.

GO AWAY

 

 

on Aug 13, 2009

Hey I'm sorry OK? I added a smiley. I thought you would take it as a joke. I admit I am a broken record with the Linux and Mac stuff so I'll quit talking about those subjects on WC. Fair enough?

I don't like being called a troll.

The funny thing is I run Windows on both my machines.

on Aug 13, 2009

I was browsing some free software sites (can't remember which, I was just following links),

I'm surprised fuzzy, an open invitation to disaster. the only none affliated site that I venture into is cnet.

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