Malware With Clean Install of Windows 7

mikem395

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I recently had some computer work done, and had a computer technician do a clean install of Windows 7 on a new HDD since he already had the machine, and I figured it would be convenient. I'm not saying the computer technician is not trust worthy, but after some recent circumstances that occurred after doing business with them, I want to be cautious. I would like to make sure that malware, key loggers, or other things of this sort were not installed.

Will formatting the HDD and installing Windows 7 again take care of this, or is there other actions that need to be taken?
 

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1TB Western Digital
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Windows
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Chrome
A reinstall would of course be the cleanest solution. Else you can run scanners to see whether there is anything. Start with Malwarebytes. That is pretty good.

Maybe others can chime in with their favorite scanner - there are so many options.
 

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I would like to make sure that malware, key loggers, or other things of this sort were not installed.

I can't imagine any tool that would "make sure" with enough confidence that I'd accept its results. I would continue to wonder even if I ran a dozen tools.

Which points to a clean install.

You may be the type who doesn't worry about that stuff much, but the fact that you post the question implies that only a clean install would satisfy you.
 

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Windows 7 Home Premium SP1, 64-bitIntel Skylake i5-6600K, not overclocked8 GB HyperX DDR4-2666 (2 x 4 GB)none; graphics are integrated on CPU
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PC/Desktop
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Ignatz Special; 4 speed manual gearbox; factory air conditioning; one of one
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Windows 7 Home Premium SP1, 64-bit
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Intel Skylake i5-6600K, not overclocked
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AsRock Z170M Extreme 4, micro ATX
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none; graphics are integrated on CPU
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onboard: Realtek ALC1150; external: USB Behringer UF0-202
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Pale Moon
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All fans PWM; speeds at idle: CPU circa 500 rpm; intake circa 600 rpm; exhaust circa 600 rpm; CPU temps 27 idle and 47 C load in a warm room (27 C/81 F) when running Intel Extreme Tuning Utility stress test.
If you want to take the added measure of protection to be sure nothing survives (some rootkits can survive a clean install & a format), wipe the drive with a disk eraser. Here is a list of tools you can use to do this.

Five hard disk cleaning and erasing tools - TechRepublic
 

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Dell Hell oh Well
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I can't imagine any tool that would "make sure" with enough confidence that I'd accept its results.

Good pointing and very true. No antivirus (or antimalware, antispyware, antiwhatever or anti-AnythigYouWantToCallThem) can ever warrant that the computer is effecitvely clean, at most those can claim that they didn't find anything. That's one of the reasons why antiviruses are becoming increasingly inefective and unreliable.

I would go with a clean install too for extra security. If you don't mind the hassle of reinstalling and configuring everything again, but the result is well worth it.
 

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Toshiba Sattelite A665-S6092
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Windows 7 Ultimate x64
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Intel Core i7-740QM
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ClamWin 0.98.7
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Here is a tutorial by Brink that should meet you needs.
Clean All clean install.


http://www.sevenforums.com/tutorials/52129-disk-clean-clean-all-diskpart-command.

infosmall1.png
Information
This will show you how to use the clean or clean all command on a selected disk to delete all of it's MBR or GPT partitions, volumes, and any hidden sector information on MBR disks is overwritten.

The data on the HDD is not written over using the clean command like it does with the clean all command below. With the clean command, the data on the HDD is only marked as being deleted instead and is only written over when new data is written/saved to the same location on the HDD next.

OR

You could use the clean all command (secure erase) to do the above and also have each and every disk sector on the HDD written over and zeroed out completely to securely delete all data on the disk to help prevent the data from being able to be recovered. "Clean All" takes about an hour per 320 GB to finish running.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Secure_erasure
 

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Windows 10 Pro. 64/ version 1709 Windows 7 Pr...Intel i7-6800K @ 4.3Corsair Platinum 16 gig @2400EVGA GTX 1070 OC
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Windows 10 Pro. 64/ version 1709 Windows 7 Pro/64
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Intel i7-6800K @ 4.3
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ASUS X-99 Deluxe II
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