My outdated McAfee antivirus program gave me a message it detected Exploit-IEPageSpoof trojan and deleted it. I don’t know what this is and don’t understand why Avast never detected that.
Does Avast NOT detect trojans and if not, what software should I be using?
You should remove McAfee from your computer as, even in its outdated state, it can conflict with avast.
Avast! does detect trojans but there are other programs dedicated to trojan detection. Avg AntiSpyware and A-Squared are both free and are worth having
I read the descriptions of this trojan but really don’t understand what it is or, more importantly, how serious this trojan is. In other words, has it enabled any sort of hacker intrusion, etc?
It is a mystery to me how this would have been placed on my pc. I have never opened any sort of .exe files from e-mails or downloaded any suspicious or “adult” software, etc.
Its possible that its a false positive. One reason for updating your signatures is to correct FPs - if McAfee is out of date these corrections are not occurring.
If you can locate the file upload a sample to Virus Total and Jotti to see if any other AV programs detect a problem
To COMPLETELY REMOVE McAfee from your computer, follow the info at
http://ts.mcafeehelp.com/faq3.asp?docid=71525
One of the Best antispyware/antitrojan programs is the FREE version
of SUPERantispyware, available from www.superantispyware.com .
There are Good Firewalls, some of them FREE at
www.filehippo.com/software/firewalls/ ; of the ones here, I recommend
either the Sunbelt Kerio, Sygate, or Zone Alarm. If you chose the Sygate,
I will provide a link to its "SetUp Guide" .
I have read the descriptions of this Exploit trojan but really don’t understand what it is or does. Can they be sent at random to a pc? In other words, I didn’t download any software, open and *.exe files, suspicious e-mail, etc.
Hello. These exploit detections are usually scripts embedded in a webpage that take advantage of unpatched systems to install malware with no user interaction. The vml exploit which affected Windows vgx.dll is another example. Make sure you have all critical Windows patches from Windows Update and keep your AV up to date. Unpatched systems can become infected by simply visiting a malicious site. IE is a favorite target so locking down security settings is a must. Also Avast doesn’t seem to detect the vml exploit neither, I’m not sure if they cover exploits but it detects everything else I have thrown at it with the exception of a few old vbs script viruses. Hope this helps.