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561 entries found. Displaying page 5 of 29.
Updated on Jun 29, 2005

Windows Defender detects and removes this threat.

This threat stops you from loading Windows and displays a full-screen message, commonly called a "lock screen". If this threat asks you to pay a fee or fine, do not pay it. The message is a fraud.

It tries to scare you into paying a fine or texting a premium-charge phone number to unlock your PC.

You can read more on our ransomware page.

Alert level: severe
Updated on Dec 07, 2006
Alert level: severe
Updated on Dec 08, 2006
Alert level: severe
Updated on Jul 13, 2007
Alert level: severe
Updated on Jul 13, 2007
Alert level: severe
Updated on Jul 13, 2007
Alert level: severe
Updated on Jun 05, 2008

Windows Defender detects and removes this threat.

This threat stops you from opening files and displays a message, commonly called a "lock screen". If this threat asks you to pay a fee or fine, do not pay it. The message is a fraud.

It tries to scare you into paying a fine to unlock your PC.

You can read more on our ransomware page.

Alert level: severe
Updated on Jul 05, 2010
Alert level: severe
Updated on Jul 19, 2010
Alert level: severe
Updated on Jul 20, 2010
Alert level: severe
Updated on Jan 14, 2011
Alert level: severe
Updated on Apr 16, 2012

Microsoft Defender Antivirus detects and removes this threat.

This threat is an HTML coponent used by Ransom:Win32/Reveton.A. It stops you from loading Windows and displays a full-screen message, commonly called a "lock screen". If this threat asks you to pay a fee or fine, do not pay it. The message is a fraud.

It tries to scare you into paying a fine to unlock your PC.

You can read more on our ransomware page.

The trend towards increasingly sophisticated malware behavior, highlighted by the use of exploits and other attack vectors, makes older platforms so much more susceptible to ransomware attacks. From June to November 2017, Windows 7 devices were 3.4 times more likely to encounter ransomware compared to Windows 10 devices.

Read our latest report: A worthy upgrade: Next-gen security on Windows 10 proves resilient against ransomware outbreaks in 2017.

Alert level: severe
Updated on May 24, 2012
Alert level: severe
Updated on Jun 12, 2012
Alert level: severe
Updated on Jul 26, 2012
Alert level: severe
Updated on Jul 26, 2012
Alert level: severe
Updated on Jul 30, 2012
Alert level: severe
Updated on Sep 27, 2012
Alert level: severe
Updated on Oct 02, 2012
Alert level: severe
Updated on Nov 15, 2012

Microsoft Defender Antivirus detects and removes this threat.

The threat is a HTML page used by the Ransom:Win32/Tobfy family of ransomware.

This threat stops you from loading Windows and displays a full-screen message, commonly called a "lock screen". If this threat asks you to pay a fee or fine, do not pay it. The message is a fraud.

Our ransomware FAQ page has more information on this type of threat.

The trend towards increasingly sophisticated malware behavior, highlighted by the use of exploits and other attack vectors, makes older platforms so much more susceptible to ransomware attacks. From June to November 2017, Windows 7 devices were 3.4 times more likely to encounter ransomware compared to Windows 10 devices.

Read our latest report: A worthy upgrade: Next-gen security on Windows 10 proves resilient against ransomware outbreaks in 2017.

Alert level: severe