Fake Virus For Making Fun With Your Friends

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Janet Denzel

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May 29, 2024, 7:54:57 AM5/29/24
to centdawdbumbo

The only tool you need for this ible is a Memory stick, and a computer. :)


the memory stick is intirelly optional bu you can put the fake virus file on it then go to a friends house and load it on their pc while they arent looking. it takes less than a minute!

Fake virus for making fun with your friends


Download Ziphttps://t.co/HwaEFsEuUV



Now your going to type: shutdown -s -t 60 -c "Type your message here"

60 is 1 minute until it shuts down but you can change the time to any number you want.

"Type your message here" just like what it says. I put : "WARNING YOUR COMPUTER HAS ENCOUNTERED A FATAL ERROR. SHUTING DOWN IN ONE MINUTE......."
Note: LEAVE THE QUOTATION MARKS THERE OR IT WONT WORK!

After puting in your message Input the name of the 'virus' I put ' RAM.

Who hasn't gone mad trying to fix his/her computer, trying to delete all of the harmful software? It may not be funny with a real virus, but a fake one is. Or course, you can make a simple virus just with Notepad. There's no need to download applications to fool others; in less than 1 minute you will learn how to create a fake virus to scare friends, family or even teachers! Why not?

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Prank your friends by secretly opening this website on their computer while they're away. Wait for them to return and watch their reaction.
Make sure you activate full screen to hide the address bar and browser frame. - Press F11 to toggle full screen.

If you've got a mischievous streak and an insatiable craving for laughter, you've just stumbled upon your new favorite corner of the internet. At Pranx, we've mastered the art of the perfectly executed prank, and we're here to help you elevate your prank game to the next level.

Whether you're looking to pull a light-hearted joke on a friend, engage in some friendly office tomfoolery, or simply want to share a good laugh, our website is your one-stop-shop for ingenious pranks, gags, and humorous how-tos. We've curated a treasure trove of side-splitting ideas, harmless antics, fake simulators to unleash your inner prankster.

You can open the pranks, interact with the programs and do great things. Go ahead and explore them clicking around! They work best on a desktop computer or at least on a tablet because most mobile web browsers don't allow us to activate full screen mode.

About a month ago, I used PyInstaller and Inno Setup to produce an installer for my Python 3 script. My AVG Business Edition AntiVirus just started complaining with today's update that the program has an SCGeneric Trojan Horse in the main .exe file used to start the program (in the folder created by PyInstaller that has all of the Python "guts"). At first I just thought it was a false positive in AVG, but submitting the .exe file to VirusTotal I get this analysis:

PyInstaller comes with pre-compiled bootloader binaries for different OSs. I suggest compile them by yourself on your machine. Make sure everything is consistent on your machine. For Windows 64-bit, install Python 64-bit. Download PyInstaller 64-bit for Windows. Make sure Visual Studio (VS) corresponding to your Python is installed, check below:

Compile the bootloader of PyInstaller on your machine with VS. It automatically updates the run.exe, runw.exe, run_d.exe, runw_d.exe in DownloadedPyinstallerFolder\PyInstaller\bootloader\Windows-64bit. Check below for more info on how to compile the bootloader:

I was able to submit the file in question to AVG's "Report a false detection" page, at -sample. I received a response back fairly quickly (I can't remember exactly how long, but it was less than a day) that they had analyzed my file and determined that it did not have a virus. They said that they had adjusted their virus definitions so that it would not trigger a false positive anymore. I updated my definitions and it was still triggering, so I contacted them again with my virus definition version, and I heard back that the version I had wasn't high enough - I think there was some delay on my definitions because I get them from a local server. But within a day I had the right version of the definitions and the false positive didn't trigger anymore.

In my case the first exe build was accepted by the antivirus (Windows Defender) but subsequent builds were flagged as having a trojan.I solved it by using the pyinstaller --clean option every time I built the executable

And by the way it didn't work on 3.4.0 so I just randomly picked that version(4.1) and its pretty good looking so far :>I'm pretty sure that it works on more than only that one version but that i experienced personally

I had a similar problem with a pyinstaller exe under Windows. Avira put that file into quarantine since it was considered potentially dangerous (due to heuristics, which means that some segments look typical for a virus, but no virus is actually found).

Keep in mind that the exe files you generate yourself are unique (as a consequence, the Avast scanner usually returns a message "you have found a rare file, we are doing a quick test", and delays execution for 15 seconds to perform a more thorough test).

I tried to do it with PyInstaller, but the error remained, the way I had to resolve this situation was, instead of using PyInstaller I used the Cx-Freeze library, it helped me with the problem, the only difference is that setup.py must be used.

A close friend texted me this morning asking if I meant to send that last text, noting it was suspicious. I asked for a screenshot of the text in question, and it is a text from my number with spam I did not send. The text said "Visit :8080/webgui/vm[...] to read your new mms." and it appears in-line with the actual dialogue I'd had with this person.

From my phone, I see no record of sending that text. They received it around 10am, and at 11:30am I received a text from an unrecognized # with similar spam but in German. An odd coincidence or just a sign spammers were active all around. In any case, because of the difference in timing, at least the German text couldn't have infected me and caused the text to my friend.

Neither of us clicked either spam attack's link. I expect the German one I received can safely be ignored. I'm uncertain about the other text which my friend received from my # and which I have no record of sending.

Does the text my friend received from my number imply one of us has a virus? I'm concerned this is the case because either a virus on my phone sent spam out to the # I contact the most (this friend), or a virus on my friend's phone brought up spam spoofed from the # they contact the most (me). How else would the spammer know to spoof from my # to my friend's # - of all the #s it could go to/come from, my friend and I are each other's top contact.

If it does imply one of us has a virus as I suspect, is there a way to tell who, or do we each need to take antivirus cleanup measures? We both have Android phones and I think the same carrier but different phone models and OS versions. We both have antivirus on our phones (WebRoot on my end, Norton on my friend's) and scans came back clean.

THere are two possible scenarios: There is a virus on the sender's phone, or the SMS was spoofed, as per the SMS Spoofing link in your post. I think the most likely scenario is that there is a virus on your phone that WebRoot is not able to detect. A good way to check is to ask some of your other contacts to see if they have received a similar text. If this were a virus, I would expect your other contacts to have received similar messages.

If this was done via SMS spoofing, this implies that whoever was trying to compromise the receiver's phone knew that the two of you had a pre-existing relationship, assuming they weren't just spoofing random numbers. This would imply a targeted attack.

I have a friend/client running Windows 8.1 and Internet Explorer (all current and updated) that he uses IE to access his Comcast email. We leaves IE running to monitor his emails but after sitting idle anywhere from 1 hour to several hours the fake virus warning with audio comes on (so this happens without any movement or clicking by the user). The IE tab changes from the current site to flash yellow and now says Microsoft Support (but obviously it is not). The only way at this point that IE can be closed is to use task manager. The user has a current trial version of the latest Malwarebytes program and has scanned the system several times, the first scan 2 weeks ago produced a few PUP/issues and cleaned them but the warning messages came back. Subsequent scans did not find any issues. This is the first time that I have seen this issue where Malwarebytes did not permanently resolve the issue and where the warning message pops up even when IE is sitting idle. Any suggestion how to fix this would be appreciated! My latest attempt was to reset IE - waiting on result. Possibly uninstalling/re-installing IE and/or installing Chrome?


Similar to these ?

I have created a 1series of videos generated from these kinds of fraud sites for the purposes of recognition and education. They are all videos from real web sites. ALL are FRAUDS.

All these have one thing in common and they have nothing to do with any software on your PC. They are all nefarious web sites meant to defraud you of money. The objective is to, falsely, goad you to make the phone call and pay for some service contract for an incident that never happened. From there they may continue to charge your Credit Card for other services, remote into your computer and do real damage and/or exfiltrate your personal data and they may use the information they obtain from you to commit additional frauds.

MalwareScam.wmv
MalwareScam-1.wmv
MalwareScam-2.wmv
MalwareScam-3.wmv
MalwareScam-4.wmv
MalwareScam-5.wmv
MalwareScam-6.wmv

I have also created a PDF ScreenShow of a myriad of FakeAlert screens - FakeAlert-Screens.pdf / Flash Version


Reference:
US FBI PSA - Tech Support Scam


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