Antivirus2009

Posted June 25, 2008 

Antivirus2009 is a damn scam, another fake anti-spyware program. Like other rogue antispyware, Antivirus2009’s game plan is to get you to waste £20-40 ($34.95-$79.95) on removing “threats” you don’t have.

How does Antivirus2009 do this? Antivirus2009 runs “security” scans with fake results and Antivirus2009 popups tell you you’re infected with system threats that don’t exist.

Personally, stuff like Antivirus2009 makes me want to toss my computer out the window. But then I take a deep breath, put down my computer, and just remove Antivirus2009.

I’ll show you how to get rid of Antivirus2009 for free.

Antivirus2009 Could Be a Trojan

WTF Are Trojans?

Remember that college class you took on Greek mythology?

Neither do I.

Trojans get their name from Greek mythology, though — a Trojan is software that acts like a Trojan horse. The same way that Trojan horse looked like a great gift to the Spartans — only it was stuffed full of soldiers — Trojans are software that appear harmless but are really designed to kill your computer.

Trojans often pretend to be a video codec you need to watch porn — really — , maybe a photo attached to email, or some sort of other harmless software. Once you open your gates to a Trojan though, it can spy on you, download more malware, or allow a hacker to do whatever he wants on your machine.

How Antivirus2009 and Trojans Might Infect You

  • Websites: When you’re surfing the web, you won’t only get infected when you download some codecs or plugins. Sometimes all you have to do is visit a site and a Trojan secretly downloads itself onto your computer. Scary. Use a browser like Firefox to prevent this — it’s much more secure than Internet Explorer.
  • Open ports: If you run any file-sharing applications — and I’m not just talking peer-to-peer music software — you risk opening up your system to infection. It can be as simple as leaving file sharing open on your instant message client. My rule of thumb is to close off every port. Set up a firewall, too, if you don’t already have one.
  • Email: Some random person you don’t really remember just forwarded you some hot pictures? Don’t open them. Lots of Trojans are dolled up as harmless looking email attachments that take advantage of security holes in your mail client. Spam blocker software can help, but it’s better just not to open any attachments from people you don’t know.

Popularity: 28% [?]

Talk Crap About Antivirus2009 (5 Comments)

  1. 24 July 2008 12:49 pm
    Jenifermayers wrote:

    antivirus 2009 is not a trojan. but it’s definitely a malware, i suggest remove antivirus 2009 as soon as possible.

  2. 26 October 2008 12:50 pm
    John wrote:

    WOOHOOOO thanks dude a most excellent fix with the smitfraudfix thingy I managed to rid my pc of this damn feck annoying virus malware, asswipe program within ten minutes for bugger all money, and still get to see the MotoGP without having to peer over a laptop screen. fantastic and its a shame the internet isnt full of helpful dudes like your good self instead of virus dumping assholes. Cheers :-)

  3. 10 November 2008 12:44 pm
    rakesh wrote:

    antivirus 2009 is fake & it can crash down ur mother board. so remove it as soon as possible or formatt ur pc.

  4. 12 January 2009 4:23 am
    Maxim Korolev wrote:

    About two months ago i first encountered Antivirus2009 messages which started to periodically appear on my lap-top’s screen. I’m not any bit of an expert in computer software. I had a Sony with Windows Vista Ultimate. My Norton360 subscription had expired by then. I was just deleting all those persistent little windows till they stopped bothering me, after a short while. Then, about a week ago, it started happening again. My actions were same as before. I know it’s stupid. But i’m just a complete dilettante in computers. By then my lap-top was sort of protected by a South-Korean free security programme. My girlfriend recommended it to me. All’s in Korean in there, so i couldn’t read any warning messages. Finally my lap-top just totally crashed. I mean stopped functioning altogether. Now, if i try to turn it on, the screen stays almost black with an arrow in the middle as long as i keep it on. Nothing changes whatever i tried, which is probably not a lot. Could you suggest anything? Thanks in advance

  5. 12 January 2009 8:03 pm
    Graham Bateman wrote:

    Maxim, when you boot up your computer, keep pushing F8. You should be given a menu where you can choose Safe Mode. When the pop up appears, don’t use system restore. Is the computer booting into safe mode?

    If it is, click Start > Run: Type msconfig and click OK. Click the start up tab and click disable all. Click Ok and let windows do a normal restart. If your computer boots properly, uninstall your Korean security software and download a good antispyware program. I recommend Spyware Doctor. Whatever you choose, have it do a scan and see what it finds.

    Tell me how you get on, if it still doesn’t boot up we’ll try another approach.