Qhost, is it still there, if virus tool says not there, is it?

B

Bruce F. Leavitt

If you use the symantec fix tool for qhost, and it says it didn't find it.
Is it possible it is still there? I have run the tool 2 or 3 times and it
doens't find it?

Everything I read in the threads say that, this has to do with search
engines?

If I type something in the address bar, most cases it doesn't go anyplace?
Does this mean it is still qhost?
 
R

Ramesh [MS-MVP]

Open the HOSTS file and delete all mappings except:
127.0.0.1 localhost

The file is located at
"C:\windows\system32\drivers\etc" (named "HOSTS")

Backup the current HOSTS file first.

Also, delete the HOSTS file present in C:\Windows\Help folder.

--
Regards,
Ramesh [MS-MVP]
AIM: SRamesh2k


~ Please reply to newsgroup ~


"Bruce F. Leavitt" <brucefl56 at hotmail.com> wrote in message
If you use the symantec fix tool for qhost, and it says it didn't find it.
Is it possible it is still there? I have run the tool 2 or 3 times and it
doens't find it?

Everything I read in the threads say that, this has to do with search
engines?

If I type something in the address bar, most cases it doesn't go anyplace?
Does this mean it is still qhost?
 
R

Ramesh [MS-MVP]

For Win98/Me, the hosts file is located at: C:\WINDOWS

--
Regards,
Ramesh [MS-MVP]
AIM: SRamesh2k


~ Please reply to newsgroup ~


"Bruce F. Leavitt" <brucefl56 at hotmail.com> wrote in message
If you use the symantec fix tool for qhost, and it says it didn't find it.
Is it possible it is still there? I have run the tool 2 or 3 times and it
doens't find it?

Everything I read in the threads say that, this has to do with search
engines?

If I type something in the address bar, most cases it doesn't go anyplace?
Does this mean it is still qhost?
 
B

Bruce F. Leavitt

What if there isn't a host file in the help folder?

Also in the HOSTS file in windows xp the only thing listed is the 127.0.01?
 
R

Ramesh [MS-MVP]

I've seen two instances where resettings the TCP/IP in XP fixed it. Try
this:

Click Start | Run | type "cmd".
Type "netsh int ip reset c:\changes.txt"

--
Regards,
Ramesh [MS-MVP]
AIM: SRamesh2k


~ Please reply to newsgroup ~


"Bruce F. Leavitt" <brucefl56 at hotmail.com> wrote in message
What if there isn't a host file in the help folder?

Also in the HOSTS file in windows xp the only thing listed is the 127.0.01?
 
J

Jim Byrd

Hi Bruce -
You've apparently gotten infected with the QHosts trojan. Read here for
information:

http://www.sarc.com/avcenter/venc/data/trojan.qhosts.html

http://us.mcafee.com/virusInfo/default.asp?id=description&virus_k=100719

http://www3.ca.com/virusinfo/virus.aspx?ID=37191



Try the following:

1. Be sure that you install hotfix 828750 which fixes the exploit that this
virus uses:

http://www.microsoft.com/windows/ie/downloads/critical/828750/default.asp

2. Update and run a complete Anti-Virus software check of your system. Most
of the major AV companies have updated their latest signatures to detect
this virus (for Network Associates (McAfee), be sure to get the EXTRADAT.exe
update from the above page as well as your regular update).

3a. If running your AV doesn't clean it up, go to this page, read the
directions CAREFULLY (particularly about the Restore option) and download
and run the removal tool:

http://securityresponse.symantec.com/avcenter/venc/data/trojan.qhosts.removal.tool.html

3b. An alternative that by report may work better than the Symantec tool is
the Brown University Removal Tool, here:

http://software.brown.edu/dist/w-cleanqhosts.html

If that still doesn't clean it up (and a number of people are reporting that
it did not with the Symantec tool), then follow the Manual Removal
instructions at the link in 3a. The following is courtesy of Mike Burgess:

"Does a HOSTS file still exist in Windows\Help?

Trojan Qhosts hijacks the HOSTS file, however unlike normal redirectors,

this one hides the HOSTS file in the "Windows\Help" folder. It then

creates entries that redirects all major search engines to a website.

Note: this website has now been removed, thus the DNS errors.

[more info]

http://www.mvps.org/winhelp2002/hosts.htm (bottom of page)

Run the beta version of HijackThis
(http://www.spywareinfo.com/~merijn/files/beta/hijackthis.zip)

_______________________________________

Mike Burgess http://www.mvps.org/winhelp2002/

Blocking Spyware, Adware, Parasites, Hijackers, Trojans, with a HOSTS file

http://www.mvps.org/winhelp2002/hosts.htm [updated 9-30-03]

Please post replies to this Newsgroup, email address is invalid"



Just to follow up on this - there may be multiple different HOSTS files on
your machine with the trojan's settings some of which cannot not be removed
by the Removal Tools, and you'll need to do a search to find and just delete
them all, or clean them per the manual directions at the Symantec site.

4. You probably will then need to restore your HOSTS file if you plan to use
it for DNS speedup and/or ad blocking. Download the Hosts File Reader:

http://members.shaw.ca/techcd/VB_Projects/HostsFileReader.exe

To create a new Default version of HOSTS, run the program, click the "Read
Hosts File" button, click the button labeled "Reset Defaults" and click
"Save Changes." Note that this is NOT a recreation of your original HOSTS
file, but a brand new "initialized" one. Now go to normal HOSTS file
location (Windows XP\2000 Location: - C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM32\DRIVERS\ETC or
Windows 98\ME Location: - C:\WINDOWS) and rename the "hosts" file that it
created to "HOSTS" (no quotes, all caps, no extension). If you've been using
your HOSTS file for ad blocking (see
http://www.mvps.org/winhelp2002/hosts.htm Blocking Unwanted Ads with a Hosts
File), then you'll need to reset the new default you've created up for that
purpose. (Recommended, BTW - it also blocks a lot of "malware" as well as
offensive advertising.)





--
Please respond in the same thread.
Regards, Jim Byrd, MS-MVP



In
 
H

H Leboeuf

An other removal tool that has been used with success.
http://www.brown.edu/Facilities/CIS/Software_Services/virus/index.html



Bruce F. Leavitt said:
What if there isn't a host file in the help folder?

Also in the HOSTS file in windows xp the only thing listed is the 127.0.01?


Ramesh said:
Open the HOSTS file and delete all mappings except:
127.0.0.1 localhost

The file is located at
"C:\windows\system32\drivers\etc" (named "HOSTS")

Backup the current HOSTS file first.

Also, delete the HOSTS file present in C:\Windows\Help folder.

--
Regards,
Ramesh [MS-MVP]
AIM: SRamesh2k


~ Please reply to newsgroup ~


"Bruce F. Leavitt" <brucefl56 at hotmail.com> wrote in message
If you use the symantec fix tool for qhost, and it says it didn't find it.
Is it possible it is still there? I have run the tool 2 or 3 times and it
doens't find it?

Everything I read in the threads say that, this has to do with search
engines?

If I type something in the address bar, most cases it doesn't go anyplace?
Does this mean it is still qhost?
 
B

Bruce F. Leavitt

hi
it wasn't the qhost virus, i found it to be the kachi or something like
that, the fix that worked is posted below


http://securityresponse.symantec.com/avcenter/venc/data/w32.welchia.worm.html

H Leboeuf said:
An other removal tool that has been used with success.
http://www.brown.edu/Facilities/CIS/Software_Services/virus/index.html



Bruce F. Leavitt said:
What if there isn't a host file in the help folder?

Also in the HOSTS file in windows xp the only thing listed is the 127.0.01?


Ramesh said:
Open the HOSTS file and delete all mappings except:
127.0.0.1 localhost

The file is located at
"C:\windows\system32\drivers\etc" (named "HOSTS")

Backup the current HOSTS file first.

Also, delete the HOSTS file present in C:\Windows\Help folder.

--
Regards,
Ramesh [MS-MVP]
AIM: SRamesh2k


~ Please reply to newsgroup ~


"Bruce F. Leavitt" <brucefl56 at hotmail.com> wrote in message
If you use the symantec fix tool for qhost, and it says it didn't find it.
Is it possible it is still there? I have run the tool 2 or 3 times and it
doens't find it?

Everything I read in the threads say that, this has to do with search
engines?

If I type something in the address bar, most cases it doesn't go anyplace?
Does this mean it is still qhost?
 

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