L
LuckyStrike
I ran BitDefender in-line virus scan and it detected a delwin.Z RAT in one
(or more ) of my received mail messages. The program has apparently detected
it in the outlook 5.pst and the Outlook 5 backup.pst. The on-line scanner
usually fails right after the detection, and the "IE has encountered an
error and must close" message box appears each time I've scanned to the
approximate same point in the folder C:Windows\local settings\application
data\microsoft\outlook.
My questions are:
Is there anyway to remove the messages in question from the .pst folders and
keep the rest of the uninfected letters?
If so, how?
If not, how may I best retain, import, or export the good items and
eliminate the infected ones, while still maintaining the most of what's
there. In other words, is it possible to get rid of the crap and not lose
too much/all of the messages which are OK?
Running W98se/IE6/Outlook2002/OE and have AVG antivirus (which did *not*
detect the Trojan Delwin.Z), FW, etc.All things updated daily if there are
daily updates for the progs in question.
(or more ) of my received mail messages. The program has apparently detected
it in the outlook 5.pst and the Outlook 5 backup.pst. The on-line scanner
usually fails right after the detection, and the "IE has encountered an
error and must close" message box appears each time I've scanned to the
approximate same point in the folder C:Windows\local settings\application
data\microsoft\outlook.
My questions are:
Is there anyway to remove the messages in question from the .pst folders and
keep the rest of the uninfected letters?
If so, how?
If not, how may I best retain, import, or export the good items and
eliminate the infected ones, while still maintaining the most of what's
there. In other words, is it possible to get rid of the crap and not lose
too much/all of the messages which are OK?
Running W98se/IE6/Outlook2002/OE and have AVG antivirus (which did *not*
detect the Trojan Delwin.Z), FW, etc.All things updated daily if there are
daily updates for the progs in question.