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| | #1 (permalink) |
| | Should I delete wininit.exe? While running a search for wininit.exe at ProcessLibrary.com, I discovered that "wininit.exe is added to the system as a result of the WOLLF.16 virus. It is a backdoor Trojan horse that allows unauthorized remote access to an infected computer." ProcessLibrary.com recommends that I "DISABLE AND REMOVE wininit.exe IMMEDIATELY. This process is most likely a virus or trojan". However, I have read elsewhere that wininit.exe is a legitimate and important file within Vista and should not be deleted so I'm not sure what to do. I have checked the file with my anti-virus program and it's fine. Wininit.exe is located in 2 places on my computer. C:\Windows\System32 and a subfolder of C:\Windows\winxsx Actually, even if I should delete the file, I'm not sure how to do so because Vista stops me from deleting it. What should I do? |
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| | #2 (permalink) |
| | Re: Should I delete wininit.exe? "BarneyKatz" <MS2005.mykids@xxxxxx> wrote ... Quote: > However, I have read elsewhere that wininit.exe is a legitimate and > important file within Vista and should not be deleted so I'm not sure what > to do. I have checked the file with my anti-virus program and it's fine. user mode process which runs when you start Windows, after the Session Manager, smss.exe. It is responsible for starting the service control manager, the LSA Subsystem and the Local Session Manager. If you delete wininit.exe, Windows cannot run. Fortunately, in Vista you are prevented from accidently deleting this file, even if you are the Administrator. People sometimes grumble that Vista prevents administrators from doing stuff; but as you can see, it's actually a Good Thing :-). There may have been a virus that masqueraded as winnit.exe back around Windows 95 days, but that info seems very out of data, now. Every correctly functioning Vista machine has a wininit.exe file. The best way to protect again viruses is to run one of the well-known anti-virus programs, keep it up-to-date (including program files and signature files) and let it scan your system on a regular basis. Combine that with a good firewall (like the one built-in to Vista) and you won't go too far wrong. Hope it helps, -- Andrew McLaren amclar (at) optusnet dot com dot au |
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| | #3 (permalink) |
| | Re: Should I delete wininit.exe? In the future that may be the case that you'd want to take my advice: Please, don't heed to everything you hear about deliberate poisoning of Windows with malicious even by MS itself. I heard a lot of things about some weird registry settings, and these keys and values were there, alright, but they were legitimate despite the badly-chosen names, set by MS itself, indeed. There's just some words-of-mouth launched, possibly, by Windows haters to make the fools destroy their Windows systems by themselves. Just trust your system as it is installed from a legit disc; from that point on, your luck drives you. Cheers. |
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