Scenario: I have two seperate internal hard disk in my computer which is C(OS) and D(Backup/Storage). I added some of my folder files from drive D into ransomware shield protected folders.
Question 1: What will happen if I disconnected the drive D without removing those files first in protected folders list in ransomware shield and put it into another computer, will I be able to access those files normally and make changes?
Question 2: What will happen to those files I added to ransomware shield protected folders if I’m going to uninstall Avast without removing those folder in the protected folder list first?
If you are using your secondary drive as a backup/storage drive, you should also consider off-line backup and storage if the worst happens (not just what you are talking about in this topic) you have that off-line backup.
Thanks for the advice but I don’t have spare hdd yet so can’t do offline backup. Btw can I off topic question please. Can ransomware infect or spread to the hard drive which is offline from the OS or sata controller is disabled at BIOS? Is there a harm for my backup hard drive if I just disable the sata controller in BIOS without physically remove it for a long time? Will it still consuming power/current and can cause for destruction of the hdd?
avast!'s Ransomware Shield driver just intercepts any activity that triggers the rules and prevents modifications of those files under the protection rules. If you remove the drive that was protected by it, the rules will simply wait till drive is plugged back in and they cover it again. Files moved to another system are not affected by the driver that’s running on your protected system and are thus not affected at all once the drive leaves your computer.
Ransomware Shield doesn’t modify o change protected files in any way. It just intercepts access to those files and prevents unknown or malicious programs from changing them. Safe programs are automatically allowed and a whitelist of these safe apps is constantly maintained and updated by avast! team so you don’t have to deal with that. It may sometimes still ask you for permission on some rare or super new programs that aren’t digitally signed or known yet to avast! team.