LedHed
Active Member
- Reaction score
- 93
- Location
- Southwest Louisiana, USA
Before I get started, YES I Googled this, AND Yes, I searched the forums first, no luck.
Okay, so a new client calls me and tells me that he let
someone from "Microsoft" remote in because they say his computer is "infected."
Yep, this is one of "those" stories.
The computer was an HP Desktop that originally had Windows 8 but it had been upgraded to Windows 10.
The scammer setup a syskey password and somehow damaged the user's account so that I couldn't access the system restore points.
The user was still an admin but when I would try to access the system restore, it would give me a message about this user not having access rights to system restore.
I ended up having to do a nuke and pave, after backing up his data, of course.
What I would like to know is this, is there a way to prevent syskey from running? I considered deleting syskey.exe from the system but it is really small. It would be very easy for a scammer to replace it via file transfer.
I want to be very clear, I'm not interested in "bypassing" a syskey password. I want syskey locked down in such a way that it will not run for anyone, period.
I'm not even sure this is possible, I just thought I would ask.
Okay, so a new client calls me and tells me that he let
someone from "Microsoft" remote in because they say his computer is "infected."
Yep, this is one of "those" stories.
The computer was an HP Desktop that originally had Windows 8 but it had been upgraded to Windows 10.
The scammer setup a syskey password and somehow damaged the user's account so that I couldn't access the system restore points.
The user was still an admin but when I would try to access the system restore, it would give me a message about this user not having access rights to system restore.
I ended up having to do a nuke and pave, after backing up his data, of course.
What I would like to know is this, is there a way to prevent syskey from running? I considered deleting syskey.exe from the system but it is really small. It would be very easy for a scammer to replace it via file transfer.
I want to be very clear, I'm not interested in "bypassing" a syskey password. I want syskey locked down in such a way that it will not run for anyone, period.
I'm not even sure this is possible, I just thought I would ask.