I have a bunch of Gator files on my computer, which seem to be spyware. I can’t delete them - they give me a “disk full or protected” error when I try to dump them in the Recycle bin, and my AdAware software can’t scrub them out either.
Anybody know how to get these off your computer? They are spyware files, not something I need to run my Windows 98 OS, right?
I would try first downloading and running Spybot Search and Destroy. It’s like AdAware, but can find things it misses. I run both just to be safe.
Secondly, you probably can’t delete them because they are currently in use. After running Spybot, it will probably give you a message saying not all componats could be removed, and ask you if you want to run on startup, click yes, and reboot. It will run before anything else loads on your PC (aside from Windows.) This will hopefully remove Gator.
Oh, you also might want to run msconfig and check what programs are running at startup (go to start-> run, type msconfig, click the startup tab.) If any of those either say gator, or are located in the same directory, uncheck them so they don’t run.
Along those lines, a friend suggested pcpitstop.com to me and although I haven’t tried it yet (I’m a bit leery), I did look at their site and they mentioned the Gator lawsuit. I do have AdAware and use it. Is pcpitstop good or bad? Thanks.
Are you using Kazaa? Gator comes packaged with kazaa and can cause a number of probs, aside from just being annoying. My ISP has a “fix” for when kazaa/gator is installed on a windows machine and corrupts the winsock file. Making it impossible to go online… this happens when you use something like Adaware to remove gator… it pulls something else out messing up winsock. There can also be login problems on some networked apps.
If you plan on getting rid of Kazaa Gator… also look for things like Commonname and new.net.
kazaa lite is a good answer to Kazaa Gator Not that I dissagree with free services advertising to you, but do they have to be so pushy about it?
Okay, I downloaded and ran Spybot, and it seems to have worked. Gator doesn’t want to be called Spyware? Then maybe they shouldn’t produce products that download themselves onto peoples’ computers and not allow them to remove them when discovered. If it quacks like a duck…
Yeah, but Gator argues that the users agreed to install the software. It’s right there in the user agreement, about 50 paragraphs in, written in complicated legal terminology and technical terms the average user can’t even begin to understand. But they agreed to it. :rolleyes:
Experts questioned by CNN, this past weekend, recommended Spybot Search & Destroy. I’ve used it on two computers at home and four computers at work and it’s great! It’s also free, though you can donate via PayPal if you like. I’m so pleased with the results that I am going to donate, if only to help ascertain that updates remain free.
Also, when you search for SpyBot on Google, the first result is for SpyKiller, and the second result is for Spy Hunter. I believe the third result is SpyBot Search & Destroy. Download the file “spybotsd12,” and the two updates “spybotsd_includes” and “spybotsd_tools.” With the updates, SpyBot will search for and allow you to remove over 12,000 adware/spyware/hijacker programs and immunize your computer against over 500 others.
My fiance’s computer was riddled so badly with spyware and adware that she had lost control of her browser. I Googled every single running process in Windows Task Manager and deleted all the files for each that came up in a Windows search. This did not solve the problems but SpyBot S&D did, so I’m singing its praises, this week.