
K so; I started getting a bunch of trojans and viruses and whatnot and the only link that would open was the link to Vista Home Security 2010. Now, me being the idiot that I am, I decided to purchase a 1 year license with my mother's credit card. (Got her permission) I thought that it was safe and needed! So then after purchasing it, these pop-ups would not stop popping up so I googled Vista Home Security 2010 and find out that it's actually a trojan/virus itself!? So right now - I'm really scared, really scared. Now, I know that you can get rid of this Vista Home Security 2010 thing with softwards like Malwarebytes and am currently doing so. However, will this like - get me off the hook? Or has my mom's credit card info already been released into some hacker world!? I honestly am just really freaked out right now. What should I do!? Will the malwarebytes fix everything? Or should I be more worried!?
K well - The Malbytes or whatever it's called cleared up all the pop-ups, virus alerts, etc.. So THAT'S done with but I'd like to know FOR SURE whether or not this malby-w/e saved my mom's credit card info or not.
Answer
This manual removal method is for techie computer users. Vista Security Tool 2010 manual removal may be difficult and time consuming to remove. Thereâs no guarantee that Vista Security Tool 2010 will be removed completely. So read the Vista Security Tool 2010 removal steps carefully and good luck.
Before you start: Close all programs and Internet browsers. Also back up your computer in case you make a mistake and your computer stops working.
1.Uninstall Vista Security Tool 2010 Program
Click on Start > Settings > Control Panel > Double-click on Add/Remove Programs. Search for and uninstall Vista Security Tool 2010 if found.
2.To stop Vista Security Tool 2010 processes (view process removal steps)
Go to Start > Run > type taskmgr. The click the Processes tab and youâll see a list of running processes.
Search and stop these Vista Security Tool 2010 processes:
There are no processes.
For each unwanted process, right-click on it and then select âEnd taskâ.
3.To Unregister Vista Security Tool 2010 DLLs (view DLL removal steps)
Search and unregister these Vista Security Tool 2010 DLLs:
There are no dll's.
To locate the Vista Security Tool 2010 DLL path, go to Start > Search > All Files or Folders. Type Vista Security Tool 2010 and in the Look in: select either My Computer or Local Hard Drives. Click the Search button.
Once you have the Vista Security Tool 2010 DLL path, go to Start and then click on Run. In the Run command box, type cmd, and then click on OK.
To locate the exact DLL path, type cd in order to change the current directory. To display the contents of the directory, use the dir command. To remove the DLL file type regsvr32 /u FILENAME.dll (FILENAME is the name of the file that you want to unregister).
4.To unregister Vista Security Tool 2010 registry keys (view registry keys removal steps)
Go to Start > Run > type regedit > press OK.
Edit the value (on the right pane) by right-clicking on it and selecting the Modify option. Select the Delete option.
Search and delete these Vista Security Tool 2010 registry keys:
There are no registry keys.
5.If your homepage has been changed, go to Start > Control Panel > Internet Options > click on the General > click Use Default under Home Page. Add the your desired default homepage, then click Apply > click OK. Open a new web browser to check that you have your desired default homepage.
6.Remove Vista Security Tool 2010 Directories.
To find Vista Security Tool 2010 directories, go to Start > My Computer > Local Disk (C:) > Program Files > Show the contents of this folder.
Search and delete the following Vista Security Tool 2010 directories:
There are no directories.
Right-click on the Vista Security Tool 2010 folder and select Delete.
A message will appear saying âAre you sure you want to remove the folder Vista Security Tool 2010 and move all its contents to the Recycle Bin?â, click Yes.
Another message will appear saying âRenaming, moving or deleting Vista Security Tool 2010 could make some programs not work. Are you sure you want to do this?â, click Yes.
7.To remove Vista Security Tool 2010 icons on your Desktop, drag and drop them to the Recycle Bin.
Youâve completed the Vista Security Tool 2010 manual removal instructions!
This manual removal method is for techie computer users. Vista Security Tool 2010 manual removal may be difficult and time consuming to remove. Thereâs no guarantee that Vista Security Tool 2010 will be removed completely. So read the Vista Security Tool 2010 removal steps carefully and good luck.
Before you start: Close all programs and Internet browsers. Also back up your computer in case you make a mistake and your computer stops working.
1.Uninstall Vista Security Tool 2010 Program
Click on Start > Settings > Control Panel > Double-click on Add/Remove Programs. Search for and uninstall Vista Security Tool 2010 if found.
2.To stop Vista Security Tool 2010 processes (view process removal steps)
Go to Start > Run > type taskmgr. The click the Processes tab and youâll see a list of running processes.
Search and stop these Vista Security Tool 2010 processes:
There are no processes.
For each unwanted process, right-click on it and then select âEnd taskâ.
3.To Unregister Vista Security Tool 2010 DLLs (view DLL removal steps)
Search and unregister these Vista Security Tool 2010 DLLs:
There are no dll's.
To locate the Vista Security Tool 2010 DLL path, go to Start > Search > All Files or Folders. Type Vista Security Tool 2010 and in the Look in: select either My Computer or Local Hard Drives. Click the Search button.
Once you have the Vista Security Tool 2010 DLL path, go to Start and then click on Run. In the Run command box, type cmd, and then click on OK.
To locate the exact DLL path, type cd in order to change the current directory. To display the contents of the directory, use the dir command. To remove the DLL file type regsvr32 /u FILENAME.dll (FILENAME is the name of the file that you want to unregister).
4.To unregister Vista Security Tool 2010 registry keys (view registry keys removal steps)
Go to Start > Run > type regedit > press OK.
Edit the value (on the right pane) by right-clicking on it and selecting the Modify option. Select the Delete option.
Search and delete these Vista Security Tool 2010 registry keys:
There are no registry keys.
5.If your homepage has been changed, go to Start > Control Panel > Internet Options > click on the General > click Use Default under Home Page. Add the your desired default homepage, then click Apply > click OK. Open a new web browser to check that you have your desired default homepage.
6.Remove Vista Security Tool 2010 Directories.
To find Vista Security Tool 2010 directories, go to Start > My Computer > Local Disk (C:) > Program Files > Show the contents of this folder.
Search and delete the following Vista Security Tool 2010 directories:
There are no directories.
Right-click on the Vista Security Tool 2010 folder and select Delete.
A message will appear saying âAre you sure you want to remove the folder Vista Security Tool 2010 and move all its contents to the Recycle Bin?â, click Yes.
Another message will appear saying âRenaming, moving or deleting Vista Security Tool 2010 could make some programs not work. Are you sure you want to do this?â, click Yes.
7.To remove Vista Security Tool 2010 icons on your Desktop, drag and drop them to the Recycle Bin.
Youâve completed the Vista Security Tool 2010 manual removal instructions!
Want Vista computers info I can understand?

Sincerely
I am getting the impression Vista capable is not the place I want to be despite the lower price and notebooks with shared memory?
Answer
Vista Capable was a term coined before Vista for consumers was released. It seems stores are trying to sell what they have left since the release at bargin prices. Though not necessary a bargin if you want to run more than Vista-Basic which does not include the aero glass interface (3D graphics) or stronger multi-media applications. Sure you can add more systems memory, graphics processing unit and exta disk space but that doesn't completely compensate for the Vista- Ready designation (post Vista release). As time goes by, those of us that would like to take advantage of all that the Premium and Ultimate versions of Vista has to offer- will be disappointed and lighter in the pocketbook as a result of having to upgrade or buy a new system anyway. I expect new delvelopments in software will be pushing the limits of Vista- Ready and certainly Vista- Capable units within a year or so. In regards to notebooks, unless you get a unit that has or can accept a graphics card in a AGP or PCIe slot- you are going to be disappointed soon. tuh- bobalot
Vista Capable was a term coined before Vista for consumers was released. It seems stores are trying to sell what they have left since the release at bargin prices. Though not necessary a bargin if you want to run more than Vista-Basic which does not include the aero glass interface (3D graphics) or stronger multi-media applications. Sure you can add more systems memory, graphics processing unit and exta disk space but that doesn't completely compensate for the Vista- Ready designation (post Vista release). As time goes by, those of us that would like to take advantage of all that the Premium and Ultimate versions of Vista has to offer- will be disappointed and lighter in the pocketbook as a result of having to upgrade or buy a new system anyway. I expect new delvelopments in software will be pushing the limits of Vista- Ready and certainly Vista- Capable units within a year or so. In regards to notebooks, unless you get a unit that has or can accept a graphics card in a AGP or PCIe slot- you are going to be disappointed soon. tuh- bobalot
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