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moonbeep

macrumors member
Original poster
Jan 19, 2012
85
1
Belfast,Northern Ireland
I stupidly installed a program called codec v installer so i could watch a short clip,now my browser has been hijacked and I've run clam and deleted everything it found,its also messing about with my fb account too(not sure),could some tell me how i do a full reformat with lion 10.7.3(no Discs)

Thank you Very Much
 

moonbeep

macrumors member
Original poster
Jan 19, 2012
85
1
Belfast,Northern Ireland
I stupidly installed a program called codec v installer so i could watch a short clip,now my browser has been hijacked and I've run clam and deleted everything it found,its also messing about with my fb account too(not sure),could some tell me how i do a full reformat with lion 10.7.3(no Discs)

Thank you Very Much

It now seems only my home page is different,but can't figure out how to change it back to what it was,have been in preferences etc.......
 

dknightd

macrumors 6502
Mar 7, 2004
334
1
So what was the problem? Might be handy for next person who comes along. First step I suggest is to delete cache. Might have been a waste of time. So, what fixed it for you?
 

GGJstudios

macrumors Westmere
May 16, 2008
44,545
943
I stupidly installed a program called codec v installer so i could watch a short clip,now my browser has been hijacked and I've run clam and deleted everything it found,its also messing about with my fb account too(not sure),could some tell me how i do a full reformat with lion 10.7.3(no Discs)

Thank you Very Much
Change your DNS servers on your Mac and your router to OpenDNS servers. This will show you how: Why am I being redirected to other sites?

Macs are not immune to malware, but no true viruses exist in the wild that can run on Mac OS X, and there never have been any since it was released over 10 years ago. The only malware in the wild that can affect Mac OS X is a handful of trojans, which can be easily avoided by practicing safe computing (see below). Also, Mac OS X Snow Leopard and Lion have anti-malware protection built in, further reducing the need for 3rd party antivirus apps.
  1. Make sure your built-in Mac firewall is enabled in System Preferences > Security > Firewall

  2. Uncheck "Open "safe" files after downloading" in Safari > Preferences > General

  3. Disable Java in your browser (Safari, Chrome, Firefox). This will protect you from malware that exploits Java in your browser, including the recent Flashback trojan. Leave Java disabled until you visit a trusted site that requires it, then re-enable only for the duration of your visit to that site. (This is not to be confused with JavaScript, which you should leave enabled.)

  4. Change your DNS servers to OpenDNS servers by reading this.

  5. Be careful to only install software from trusted, reputable sites. Never install pirated software. If you're not sure about an app, ask in this forum before installing.

  6. Never let someone else have access to install anything on your Mac.

  7. Don't open files that you receive from unknown or untrusted sources.

  8. For added security, make sure all network, email, financial and other important passwords are long and complex, including upper and lower case letters, numbers and special characters.

  9. Always keep your Mac and application software updated. Use Software Update for your Mac software. For other software, it's safer to get updates from the developer's site or from the menu item "Check for updates", rather than installing from any notification window that pops up while you're surfing the web.
That's all you need to do to keep your Mac completely free of any Mac OS X malware that has ever been released into the wild. You don't need any 3rd party software to keep your Mac secure.

If you still want to run antivirus for some reason, ClamXav (which is free) is one of the best choices, since it isn't a resource hog, detects both Mac and Windows malware and doesn't run with elevated privileges. You can run scans when you choose, rather than leaving it running all the time, slowing your system. ClamXav has a Sentry feature which, if enabled, will use significant system resources to constantly scan. Disable the Sentry feature. You don't need it. Also, when you first install ClamXav, as with many antivirus apps, it may perform an initial full system scan, which will consume resources. Once the initial scan is complete, periodic on-demand scans will have much lower demands on resources.
 
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