![]() I found out it was intercepting "Rogue:JS/FakeCall.D" but I have no idea why this wasn't caught the previous day unless it is brand new. When I visited the infected website, I saw a notice by Microsoft Windows Defender. The original T5 "infection" on IE (11 I think?) has not been tested by me. This is a very fast computer and I saw 33% CPU in Firefox. It turns out that there is a bit of javascript running that seems to eat up progressively more CPU time. I have visited the website with the malware, too. I am actually typing on the "infected" computer right now. So here it is the following day, and I am reporting what happened, with many of the details, to show how logmein is being used in the wild. They canceled the card about 5 minutes after informing me. I had to break the news immediately that the friend needs to cancel and dispute the credit card transaction. And they found and fixed a lot of viruses." Me: "They didn't call the number, did they"įriend: "Yeah, and it was $300 something. ![]() I was contacted a few hours later, probably to be excoriated for allowing a virus to infect the computer I built. The scammers and my friend went through a Docusign agreement. It shows IE, Firefox, and Edge browser history.Ī few hours after some consulation with my friend, some emails and the actual contract took place. Thanks go out to the program "BrowsingHistoryView" by. They opened that file inadvertently in an IE window and I have a log of the websites and URLs. from about 12 years ago (2003 file date). The desktop now has some lovely shortcuts to "Anti Hacking Security.exe" and "MY Tekies Tech Support" and it is obvious that they may have been interested in at least one old Wifi network configuration file. The charge was $399 for this "service" to unlock the computer, clean it of some scary (non-existent) malware, and to "install" Windows Defender. This led to a remote session, apparently through, , and who knows what exactly. It was Customer Service +1-85 (toll free). and the results for that search engine look woefully inadequate.Īnyway, an obviously hacked and random popup window showed up to lure T5 into calling a phone number. One of these searches appeared as a search. In less than 15 minutes of trying to do this, T5 encountered a popup ad of some kind, whether through Google ads or a bunny trail website. Since this was a new PC and there were no previous history of browsing, T5 apparently entered in Google searches for the websites to pay bills. They have a person whom I will call T5 who was going to do some accounting and bank transactions for the business. I recently setup and configured a new Windows 10 PC for a friend and person I know well. I know a lot, but with 400 PC's we manage, about 30% with this issue and getting ready to start rolling out a 4 year PC's refresh cycle, any help with these issues is appreciated. This leads me to believe there is some setting I have to change on the computer, and then update on my GPO probably, since it is likely all of the older machines that we can connect to successfully had the correct setting in the image they were deployed with, which we are now using a fresh updated image.Īnd Yes 'Allow remote connections to this computer' is selected. ![]() The remainder being: a mix of Win 7 Ent - 32 bit & Win 8.1 - 64 bitģ.) Related to # 2, pretty much all new computers we setup (Now our new implementation standard is changing to Win 10 Ent - 64 bit) cannot connect on LAN either. I can tell you that 98% of all computers here are running Win 7 Enterprise - 64bit. We end up having to set up unattended access, which makes some users nervous that we are being big brother. These are computer we have connected to in the past successfully. If I email them a link then I can connect. Even if I verify their on-net IP address and enter it manually, the session fails as if they are offline. Especially when the original helpdesk call is email related and we cannot email a link.Ģ.) Randomly - I havent found a pattern to this yet - some of our PC's we can no longer connect to via Connect on LAN. When I am connecting via my VPN (which is on its own subnet), it is definately a pain. Maybe this is by design, but at one point a while back when we first started using Rescue (a couple years back) it would bring in all subnets. I can manually type in a computer name or IP address in the search bar, and if that computer is on the network (even if on another subnet) then it will find it and try to connect. We are seeing several issues witht he connect on LAN feature and I don't know where to start.ġ.) We have separate subnets throughout our network, the Connect on Lan tab only seems to bring up the computers it sees on the same subnet that I am running the Technician console on (my computer).
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