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Removing a virus properly involves a few steps. First, download Malwarebytes — the free version is excellent and specifically designed to catch what regular antivirus misses. Run a full scan, let it quarantine everything it finds, then restart.
Next, check your browser extensions. Go to your browser settings and look at installed extensions. Remove anything you don't recognise. Malware frequently hides as fake extensions that redirect your searches and inject ads.
Check your startup programs. On Windows press Ctrl+Shift+Esc to open Task Manager, go to the Startup tab, and disable anything unfamiliar. Malware often adds itself here to survive reboots.
After cleaning, change passwords for your important accounts from a different device or after you're confident the infection is gone. Keyloggers can capture passwords if they were active during removal.
As prevention going forward: avoid downloading cracked software, be careful with email attachments, and keep Windows and your antivirus updated.
by ishaanjoshi8532
To recover deleted files, act quickly. When a file is deleted it isn't immediately erased — it's marked as available space. But new files can overwrite it. The sooner you try recovery, the better.
Recuva is the best free recovery tool for Windows. Download it from Piriform's website, install it, and run a deep scan on the drive where the file was. It will show recoverable files — save recovered files to a different drive than the one you're scanning.
On Mac, check the Trash first. If it's not there, Time Machine is your best bet if you had it enabled. System Preferences > Time Machine. If not, PhotoRec is a free cross-platform recovery tool.
For accidentally deleted cloud files (Google Drive, Dropbox, OneDrive), check the trash within the web interface. Cloud services typically retain deleted files for 30 days.
If these fail and the file is critical, professional recovery services exist but cost several hundred pounds/dollars.
by isabellataylor7896
· 1 upvotes