The Columbus Dispatch

Unexplaine­d PC activity is probably malware

- STEVE ALEXANDER Steve Alexander covers technology for the Minneapoli­s Star Tribune.

After my Windows 7 PC has been running for a while, the Windows Task Manager shows as many as 17 “regsvr32. exe” processes running at once. They keep using more and more of the processor chip’s capacity until the speed of the PC slows to a crawl. If I cancel these processes, or restart the PC, all is well for a while, then the processes start running again. I have antivirus software, but it hasn’t detected anything. What’s wrong?

Ed Lavallee, Manchester, N.H.

The “regsvr32.exe” file is a legitimate part of Windows that gives programs access to the PC. But it’s often misused to install malware.

Excessive “regsvr32.exe” activity that doesn’t trigger an error message suggests that your PC is infected. Why haven’t you been able to detect malware on the PC? A virus sometime conceals itself as a normal regsvr32.exe file; your security software may simply have missed it (no antivirus program catches everything.)

To rid your PC of malware, try running System Restore to return your PC settings to an earlier date, called a “restore point.” If you choose a restore point before the infection occurred, it will effectivel­y eliminate any malware installed on your PC since that time. (To run System Restore, see the Windows 7 section at tinyurl.com/kxanto5).

But that might not be enough to prevent infections from reoccurrin­g, because the malware installati­on files you inadverten­tly downloaded may still be present on the PC’s hard disk. To clean these files from the PC, run the free version of the Malwarebyt­es security program (see tinyurl. com/jsdacdk). It’s also a good idea to run the free versions of PC cleanup programs such as CCleaner (tinyurl.com/ okyvdo7) or AdwCleaner (tinyurl.com/huoodp2).

If that doesn’t solve the problem, your PC may suffer from a software flaw, a conflict between two programs or the accidental deletion of a Windows file (see tinyurl.com/y7s7hxxc).

More on the Windows 10 upgrade issue: Last month I suggested that Francis Larriviere of Opelousas, La., buy a new PC. It appeared that his HP PC could no longer be updated to newer versions of Windows 10, and the version he had was no longer receiving security updates from Microsoft (see tinyurl.com/ yc7m5ekn).

But William Miller of Hamilton, New Zealand, said Larriviere’s PC should be upgradeabl­e, even though it’s not listed among the HP PCs that can run newer versions of Windows 10.

He believes that any PC that ran an early version of the operating system should be upgradeabl­e to the latest one if the owner uses the “Windows 10 Update Assistant” (download it at tinyurl. com/mommev8) instead of the built-in Windows Update. It seems worth a try. Top recent area commercial real-estate transactio­ns: LLC $2,480,000 Columbus East Senior Living LLC Empire Ventures/6200 E Broad LLC LLC

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