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View Full Version : McAfee antivirus program goes berserk, freezes PCs


Lupe
04-22-2010, 11:24 AM
By PETER SVENSSON, AP Technology Writer Peter Svensson, Ap Technology Writer – Wed Apr 21, 5:45 pm ET

NEW YORK – Computers in companies, hospitals and schools around the world got stuck repeatedly rebooting themselves Wednesday after an antivirus program identified a normal Windows file as a virus.

McAfee Inc. confirmed that a software update it posted at 9 a.m. Eastern time caused its antivirus program for corporate customers to misidentify a harmless file. It has posted a replacement update for download.

McAfee could not say how many computers were affected, but judging by online postings, the number was at least in the thousands and possibly in the hundreds of thousands.

McAfee said it did not appear that consumer versions of its software caused similar problems. It is investigating how the error happened "and will take measures" to prevent it from recurring, the company said in a statement.

The computer problem forced about a third of the hospitals in Rhode Island to postpone elective surgeries and stop treating patients without traumas in emergency rooms, said Nancy Jean, a spokeswoman for the Lifespan system of hospitals. The system includes Rhode Island Hospital, the state's largest, and Newport Hospital. Jean said patients who required treatment for gunshot wounds, car accidents, blunt trauma and other potentially fatal injuries were still being admitted to the emergency rooms.

In Kentucky, state police were told to shut down the computers in their patrol cars as technicians tried to fix the problem. The National Science Foundation headquarters in Arlington, Va., also lost computer access.

Intel Corp. appeared to be among the victims, according to employee posts on Twitter. Intel did not immediately return calls for comment.

Peter Juvinall, systems administrator at Illinois State University in Normal, said that when the first computer started rebooting it quickly became evident that it was a major problem, affecting dozens of computers at the College of Business alone.

"I originally thought it was a virus," he said. When the tech support people concluded McAfee's update was to blame, they stopped further downloads of the faulty software update and started shuttling from computer to computer to get the machines working again.

In many offices, personal attention to each PC from a technician appeared to be the only way to fix the problem because the computers weren't receptive to remote software updates when stuck in the reboot cycle. That slowed the recovery.

It's not uncommon for antivirus programs to misidentify legitimate files as viruses. Last month, antivirus software from Bitdefender locked up PCs running several different versions of Windows.

However, the scale of this outage was unusual, said Mike Rothman, president of computer security firm Securosis.
"It looks to be a train wreck," Rothman said.
___
AP Business Writer Daniel Wagner in Washington contributed to this report.


http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20100421/ap_on_hi_te/us_tec_mcafee_antivirus_flaw

Long Hall
04-23-2010, 08:48 AM
McAfee was a great product 20 years ago, but it seems like they never really adapted well post-DOS. I used nothing but McAfee before Windows 95 came out, but McAfee seemed to cause more problems with Windows machines than it solved. By the time Windows 98 came out I was fed up and switched to Norton. Now I generally use either Norton or Avast.

Lupe
04-23-2010, 04:19 PM
Norton was the anti-virus that carried Chernobyl to every file on my hard-drive as it scanned... I don't trust Norton.

Until this year McAfee has done me right. This year they have changed something in their system and it is becoming a resource hog, and now this. Yes, my laptop was hit with that little oops.

Kevron
04-23-2010, 06:39 PM
I've never used McAffee or Norton, as I uninstall McAfee and or Norton on any computer I get new or old. I'll install Avast and it's proven one of the best ones out there, including a rather true story. It involved a desktop rebooting on its own every few minutes that had Norton on it, and Norton wouldn't pick up a thing. I installed Avast, ran a scan and it picked up 16 Trojans only to deal with them on its own. After that, the desktop worked better than new.

David
04-23-2010, 06:57 PM
Personally, I swear by ZoneAlarm. :)