AV AntiSpyware
Posted: April 18, 2009
Threat Metric
The following fields listed on the Threat Meter containing a specific value, are explained in detail below:
Threat Level: The threat level scale goes from 1 to 10 where 10 is the highest level of severity and 1 is the lowest level of severity. Each specific level is relative to the threat's consistent assessed behaviors collected from SpyHunter's risk assessment model.
Detection Count: The collective number of confirmed and suspected cases of a particular malware threat. The detection count is calculated from infected PCs retrieved from diagnostic and scan log reports generated by SpyHunter.
Volume Count: Similar to the detection count, the Volume Count is specifically based on the number of confirmed and suspected threats infecting systems on a daily basis. High volume counts usually represent a popular threat but may or may not have infected a large number of systems. High detection count threats could lay dormant and have a low volume count. Criteria for Volume Count is relative to a daily detection count.
Trend Path: The Trend Path, utilizing an up arrow, down arrow or equal symbol, represents the level of recent movement of a particular threat. Up arrows represent an increase, down arrows represent a decline and the equal symbol represent no change to a threat's recent movement.
% Impact (Last 7 Days): This demonstrates a 7-day period change in the frequency of a malware threat infecting PCs. The percentage impact correlates directly to the current Trend Path to determine a rise or decline in the percentage.
Threat Level: | 10/10 |
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Infected PCs: | 83 |
First Seen: | July 24, 2009 |
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OS(es) Affected: | Windows |
Av Antispyware, sometimes called AvAntiSpyware, is a rogue anti-spyware application that finds its way onto your system thanks to a Trojan or a scam website downloading and installing it there. Once AV Antispyware is on your PC and active, AV Antispyware attempts to trick you into purchasing the "full" version of this software by bombarding your computer with hundreds of annoying pop-up windows and security alerts stating that your machine is infected, when this is in fact not true.
Before doing something rather tragic to your PC due to frustration, remove AV Antispyware from your computer system as soon as possible.
Aliases
More aliases (28)
Technical Details
File System Modifications
Tutorials: If you wish to learn how to remove malware components manually, you can read the tutorials on how to find malware, kill unwanted processes, remove malicious DLLs and delete other harmful files. Always be sure to back up your PC before making any changes.
The following files were created in the system:ava.exe
File name: ava.exeSize: 1.1 MB (1103360 bytes)
MD5: 97996515c8f13618539d01ac5fb039bf
Detection count: 95
File type: Executable File
Mime Type: unknown/exe
Group: Malware file
Last Updated: December 11, 2009
ava.exe
File name: ava.exeSize: 1.11 MB (1115648 bytes)
MD5: 4a544fe2fe071a6bffda6f33a9fa4cd2
Detection count: 57
File type: Executable File
Mime Type: unknown/exe
Group: Malware file
Last Updated: December 11, 2009
setup___[1].exe
File name: setup___[1].exeSize: 115.71 KB (115712 bytes)
MD5: 93d5add0142d172e41ccfc80b61a0300
Detection count: 1
File type: Executable File
Mime Type: unknown/exe
Group: Malware file
Last Updated: December 11, 2009
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