An alternative way to fight viruses on flash drives.
I greet you Khabravchians!
On a hub I read several topics about methods of fighting viruses that are distributed via flash drives and all of them consisted of formatting the drive in NTFS and restricting write access to the root partition of the disk. This method is convenient and inconvenient at the same time, for example, at the university where I study in the library are computers with XP, on which the administrator has limited user rights so that it is not possible to use a (fully) flash drive with an NTFS partition, i.e. It is possible to read information, but it is impossible to write because of which it is impossible to use NTFS on a flash drive, because often you have to edit something in the library (lab. slave, etc.) because of which I constantly find a new one on the flash drive living creatures.
And now I propose my own method, more precisely, programs (k) y.
It is called AutorunCleaner and works according to this principle:
1. Sits in memory and waits for flash drives to connect.
2. When a flash drive is connected, it checks it for the presence of the autorun.inf file
3. If it finds it, it processes it and deletes the files that were written in it.
4. After it removes autorun.inf itself
5. The flash drive is neutralized.
I also want to say that the program is no longer new in the sense that it has been tested for quite some time now and with me and with my friends and acquaintances and at the university where I study, the reviews are positive. In addition, the university took it into service and now the system in computer classes remains much longer clean (without a program, the system did not last a day).
And somehow I was addicted to Linux and I liked one convenient thing there - when I inserted a flash drive into a computer, a shortcut for it appeared on the desktop (it seems that it was in Ubuntu) it also exists in my program.
Here is the URL for downloading \ testing AutorunCleaner
I did not describe all the possibilities, since it needs to be seen once, than heard a hundred times.