Exterminate It! Antimalware

malpedia

Known threats:700,086 Last Update:March 16, 12:51

Testimonials

Dear Jean, Thank you for your response. I had a Windows 2003 Server down because of the USBroot trojan. I purchased Exterminate It! and it corrected the problem. I am very pleased with your product! I’m going to purchase it for other workstations with problems in our company.

Jerry C.

Delarm

Aliases of Delarm (AKA):

[Kaspersky]Trojan.Delarm.a, Trojan.Delarm.b, Trojan.Delarm.c
[F-Prot]destructive program
[Panda]Trj/Delarm.A, Trj/Delarm.B, Trj/Delarm.C
[CA]Delarm.A, Delarm.D, Delarm.E

How to Remove Delarm from Your Computer^

You can effectively remove Delarm from your computer with Exterminate It!.

After installing the program, run a scan to display a list of the files associated with Delarm in the Scan Result screen and remove these files. For information about running scans and removing malware files, see the Exterminate It! Help.

Trojan

A trojan is a program that is disguised as legitimate software but is designed to carry out some harmful actions on the infected computer.

Unlike viruses and worms, trojans don’t replicate but they can be just as destructive.

These days trojans are very common. Trojans are divided into a number different categories based on their function or type of damage.

Be Aware of the Following Trojan Threats:

Pigeon.AVKK, Isaksson, Bancos.IKU, Vxidl.BFL, Pigeon.AFK.

Hacker Tool

Hacker tools are utilities designed to help hackers gain control of remote computers in order to use them as zombies (in DoS attacks, for example), download other malicious programs into those computers, or use them for other malicious purposes.

Be Aware of the Following Hacker Tool Threats:

PS.MPC, Phantom.FTP, MailSpam.Liame.10b2, Bancos.CFO, Stealth.

How Did My PC Get Infected with Delarm?^

The following are the most likely reasons why your computer got infected with Delarm:

  • Your operating system and Web browser's security settings are too lax.
  • You are not following safe Internet surfing and PC practices.

Downloading and Installing Freeware or Shareware

Small-charge or free software applications may come bundled with spyware, adware, or programs like Delarm. Sometimes adware is attached to free software to enable the developers to cover the overhead involved in created the software. Spyware frequently piggybacks on free software into your computer to damage it and steal valuable private information.

Using Peer-to-Peer Software

The use of peer-to-peer (P2P) programs or other applications using a shared network exposes your system to the risk of unwittingly downloading infected files, including malicious programs like Delarm.

Visiting Questionable Web Sites

When you visit sites with dubious or objectionable content, trojans-including Delarm, spyware and adware, may well be automatically downloaded and installed onto your computer.

Detecting Delarm^

The following symptoms signal that your computer is very likely to be infected with Delarm:

PC is working very slowly

Delarm can seriously slow down your computer. If your PC takes a lot longer than normal to restart or your Internet connection is extremely slow, your computer may well be infected with Delarm.

New desktop shortcuts have appeared or the home page has changed

Delarm can tamper with your Internet settings or redirect your default home page to unwanted web sites. Delarm may even add new shortcuts to your PC desktop.

Annoying popups keep appearing on your PC

Delarm may swamp your computer with pestering popup ads, even when you're not connected to the Internet, while secretly tracking your browsing habits and gathering your personal information.

E-mails that you didn't write are being sent from your mailbox

Delarm may gain complete control of your mailbox to generate and send e-mail with virus attachments, e-mail hoaxes, spam and other types of unsolicited e-mail to other people.