Home › Forums › Archives › Instant Messaging › Windows Live Messenger Support › 80072f0d
- This topic has 17 replies, 9 voices, and was last updated 21 years, 1 month ago by
gismo.
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January 20, 2005 at 7:17 am #111562
lodf619
MemberMissing-msn wrote:Hey Leroyd, I completely sympathise about your need for a daily dosage of msn! Im the same! anywayz what a was going to say is the link you gave about web messenger, it doesn’t work for me everytime it asks me for my password again then it just takes me back to the msn web page i started, so if you could help me that would fantabulous!
Thanks.if you have popup blockers installed, try to hold down the ctrl key before you click the signin button… or just disable your popup blockers
January 20, 2005 at 8:11 pm #111563lodf619
Memberfrom mess.be
WARNING: Bropia.A, a new MSN Messenger worm on the loose!
dwergs says:
Based on numerous reports from messers, a new virus seems to be propagating itself rapidly through MSN Messenger.F-Secure identifies the worm as Bropia.A, other antivirus software (like including Kaspersky) labels it IM-Worm.Win32.VB.a.
When received and executed by the victim, the worm places itself in the C directory with a random filename like:
sexy_bedroom.pif
drunk_lol.pif
naked_party.pif
webcam_(random number).pif
love_me.pif and similar looking names.It then automatically sends itself to active MSN Messenger contacts. It also drops and executes oms.exe, a variant of Rbot, which copies itself as lexplore.exe and adds two registry keys so it will be executed at next system startup. The bot can be used as a backdoor, logging keystrokes, relaying spam and for various other purposes and is therefor a huge security threat to your system. Brobia.A can also disable mouse right button and manipulate Windows mixer volume settings.
If you receive a file transfer request for such a file, press ALT-D or click Decline. Don’t ever execute the file. If you did, delete the file immediately and permanently from your system (My Received Files and C drive) and take necessary security measures. For more information, visit F-Secure.
[Reported by: Michaela, Quanium and Jonphamta]
a lot of what is reported here is true for me… i think this is what might have caused the screw up… if the symptoms are the same for everyone else, update your antivirus definitions and check you comp for a virus… and if worse comes to worse and your antivirus cant remove it, zero your hard drive and reformat… thats what i had to do…
January 21, 2005 at 1:36 pm #111575gismo
MemberHi there,
I have stuggled with this problem, after some intensive searching, I found the following solution. Solution worked perfectly for me!
Run:
regsvr32 softpub.dll wintrust.dll initpki.dllHope this helps 🙂
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