Avast has many different zbot/Zeus detections, the problem is that no one can equate what ZA are calling this ZeuS.Zbot.aoaq as there is no standard naming convention. So it could have many different aliases across all of the different AVs.
Trying to find what avast might be calling this (or any other AV for that matter) would require a sample to be sent to virus total with 43 different scanners and first see if avast and other AVs are detecting it and what other aliases are given.
Done some looking up on this virus it is a bad one alright
it’s hard to detect.
I have a few security apps that I scan my PC with the more the better
Avast 5
ThreatFire
SUPERAntiSpyware Free Edition
A-squared or the new one Anti-malware free
Malewarebytes Anti-Malware
The way I look at it if one does not detect something bad maybe one of the other security apps I have might.
I also have KeyScrambler free for firefox it encrypts your keystrokes deep in the kernel so it defeats known and unknown keyloggers by giving them “scrambled,” logs!!!
Here is the link for anyone that would feel a little bit safer have there keystrokes encrypted.
The one thing that I don’t see mentioned in your list is a a hard drive imaging application, if all else fails you have to have a fall back and system restore simply isn’t up to the task.
Yesterday whilst doing a little testing I trashed my system, wouldn’t reboot missing hal.dll and no doubt lots of other stuff but without hal.dll you can’t get in. I broke out my Drive Imaging application Boot CD and fired it up, 30 minutes later I’m sitting working at my system again. I do a weekly image back-up of my primary hard disk partitions (and the last one being 3 days before) and I do daily (of more frequently) back-ups of volatile files, like emails, bookmarks, documents, etc.
To cut a long story short my loss was negligible and 30 minutes of time. I bought this software many years ago, it still works great on my XP Pro system and has more than paid for itself over the years.
If you don’t have a back-up and recovery strategy, you could be in a world of hurt.
Just a quick suggestion to anyone who may be concerned about a possible infection (and I don’t intend for this to spiral into a Windows vs. Mac vs. Linux argument ;D )…
You can download and use a live CD / USB key version of Ubuntu. You can even set it up so that it’s NOT persistent (i.e. it won’t save any changes on logout) and that way you can always be assured that you’ll always have a “clean” OS to do your banking or any other “critical” things.
Since 2007, Trend Micro has been monitoring the ZBOT family. The number of ZBOT detections has substantially grown over the years. To date, Trend Micro has seen over 2,000 ZBOT detections and the numbers continue to rise.
One way or another, the wave of new Zeus/Zbot samples being distributed every day is alarming. It's kind of an "attack of the clones" when multiple modifications of the bot are being produced in-the-wild, packed and encrypted on top with all sorts of packers, including modified, hacked, or private packer builds. Before being released, every newly generated and protected bot is uploaded into popular multi-AV scanner services to make sure it is not detected by any antivirus vendor. Hence, quite a bit of a problem in terms of its distribution scale.
why do you keep posting av’s to remove zeus?1-2 days is enough to steal your “whole life” ^^,format just to make sure that this piece of destruction has rly gone ;D