Salutations!
I am having troubles getting my Sony Vegas Pro .avi movies to record to a DVD-R internal drive due to a viral infection. My main DVD recorder crashes with an "Access Violation" message or just cannot complete/hangs in the burning process.
The virus is a 2003-originated worm called W32.BLASTER.WORM that jumps in through networking TCP Port 135 via DCOM/RCP (Remote Call Procedure.)
My AVG 8.0 – free version – and Windows Firewall failed to block this worm attack. One of the tell tale marks it leaves are the words "NT AUTHORITY SYSTEM."
These words are in my User ID with AVG and also in my listings of startup programs via System Explorer views. These listings are mainly a flood of .dll's and number 82 pages double-spaced type.
My desktop machine does not do the close down in "X" seconds as some folks who have been infected report. The main effects are the listed, visual evidence, the balky DVD burner, and a slowed down system. For instance it takes about 5 minutes for my Sony program to launch.
I have an older non-networked PC that I can use and here is my main question. I have .avi movies stored on an external Firewire Accomdata hard drive. I want to take this drive off the infected machine and hook it up to the older PC and burn my movies there on the DVD burner. Will doing this cross-infect this second PC? I have a wild assortment of files on the drive. Sure I can scan it for viruses and such but someone told me doing this would carry the virus to the older desktop that is safe at the moment.
What are my other short-term options to burn these .avi movies? (if I can't get this virus patched?)
Wireless transmit?
Take the external drive in to a business that could burn them?
Buy a new external drive, load up one movie at a time, take to old machine, etc.
What are your ideas?
Any advice appreciated. I am using these movies to help build up my theatre venture.
Thanks,
Bill K.
(I am sending this in part in case others get infected and can learn what to do if I get ideas other than reformat my entire system or pay money for the Geek Squad to help me...)
I am having troubles getting my Sony Vegas Pro .avi movies to record to a DVD-R internal drive due to a viral infection. My main DVD recorder crashes with an "Access Violation" message or just cannot complete/hangs in the burning process.
The virus is a 2003-originated worm called W32.BLASTER.WORM that jumps in through networking TCP Port 135 via DCOM/RCP (Remote Call Procedure.)
My AVG 8.0 – free version – and Windows Firewall failed to block this worm attack. One of the tell tale marks it leaves are the words "NT AUTHORITY SYSTEM."
These words are in my User ID with AVG and also in my listings of startup programs via System Explorer views. These listings are mainly a flood of .dll's and number 82 pages double-spaced type.
My desktop machine does not do the close down in "X" seconds as some folks who have been infected report. The main effects are the listed, visual evidence, the balky DVD burner, and a slowed down system. For instance it takes about 5 minutes for my Sony program to launch.
I have an older non-networked PC that I can use and here is my main question. I have .avi movies stored on an external Firewire Accomdata hard drive. I want to take this drive off the infected machine and hook it up to the older PC and burn my movies there on the DVD burner. Will doing this cross-infect this second PC? I have a wild assortment of files on the drive. Sure I can scan it for viruses and such but someone told me doing this would carry the virus to the older desktop that is safe at the moment.
What are my other short-term options to burn these .avi movies? (if I can't get this virus patched?)
Wireless transmit?
Take the external drive in to a business that could burn them?
Buy a new external drive, load up one movie at a time, take to old machine, etc.
What are your ideas?
Any advice appreciated. I am using these movies to help build up my theatre venture.
Thanks,
Bill K.
(I am sending this in part in case others get infected and can learn what to do if I get ideas other than reformat my entire system or pay money for the Geek Squad to help me...)