After emergency virus removal, Vista copy no longer "genuine"; desperately need help

jadebrain

Distinguished
Nov 1, 2011
40
0
18,530
Short Version: After using Avast to remove almost 70 high-severity viruses that suddenly appeared on my other computer, my Windows Vista license seems to be no longer considered "genuine." I've got the Vista repair CD in there, but don't know what to do next. Also of note: The virus symptoms suddenly appeared after visiting a link to an article on www.science20.com.

Long Version: So, I was doing some online debating (what fun...), and some troll decided to present his "argument" in the form of a link to an article on Science 2.0. I had seen exactly one article on that site prior to that, and the information that article was dubious at best, but I figured I'd look click on the link anyway. After doing so, the page took a while to load, and when it did, the page contents didn't look suspicious (though the article's claims were dubious), but my computer started lagging immediately. At first, I figured it was probably Adobe Flash Player, which can cause the browser to lag on the laptop I'm using right now; however, opening the task manager showed that the process wasn't even running.

At that point, I realized that I probably had some malware, so I started a full system scan on Avast. After the scan was complete, there were about 67 or so high-severity viruses (which is surprising, since my previous routine scan wasn't that long ago), and after using the automatic repair option to fix them all, I was given the option of rebooting and doing a boot-time scan. After leaving that alone for a while and coming back when it was finished, I went back to my computer, and noticed a peculiar message on the lower-right corner of my screen, saying my copy of Windows Vista was not genuine. At this moment, I've got the Vista Repair CD loaded into the system, and it's idling as I try to find a solution. I have no idea what other damage, if any, may have happened, so any tips on that would be appreciated.

Normally, I'd look for the solution myself, but I've been going through a lot lately: I have had an extremely difficult time trying to figure out how to work with some of the more finicky aspects of programming do-while loops in Java, a task which I've found more mentally painful than my recent debates about formal science against students of Nietzschean philosophy (hint: Friedrich Nietzsche didn't believe in the objective existence of anything non-physical, including the subject matter of formal sciences such as logic; come to think of it, that might be why he contradicted himself so much) and users of Hastings Rashdall's moral argument alike (nothing like a war on two fronts, amirite?), and while all of this is happening, I'm about a month into an episode of insomnia, stacked on top of my chronic sleep apnea... At this point, I'm ready to skip the whole process of trying the many varieties of keyword combinations in at least several dozens of web searches, and just get right to the part where I let someone else hold my hand and tell me exactly what to do.
 

jadebrain

Distinguished
Nov 1, 2011
40
0
18,530


[insert long string of expletives here]

Really? This just... it really sucks. I had a whole bunch of stuff on the Hard Drive, too, around 600GB used of the 1TB available. I suppose, as long as I can access the data, I can try to copy what I can to another hard drive before formatting.

I've got a separate drive of the same model, which I'm using to dual-boot Linux Mint... is there a way I could access the files from there, to speed up the process?
 

Benkberg97

Reputable
Jun 4, 2015
66
0
4,660
You don't have to reformat yet. One of the infections probably screwed with your SLMGR app, which simply validates your Windows copy. Open an administrator command prompt, (Click start, type CMD in the search box, right-click on command prompt and click run as admin) Once in command prompt, type the following command.

SLMGR -REARM

This will rearm your software licensing. You can only use this command 5 times, though. After that, you will have to reinstall Windows if you still aren't genuine and MS support can't help.
 

jadebrain

Distinguished
Nov 1, 2011
40
0
18,530


Early on, I actually tried experimenting with some of the features on the OS install disk, to see if I could repair the damage to the system after the viruses were gone. After trying a few things, I loaded Vista again, and the message on the lower-right corner was gone, but at the same time, a scan by Avast showed that the viruses were back. Honestly, I'm not even sure if the viruses were truly removed in the first place...
 

Benkberg97

Reputable
Jun 4, 2015
66
0
4,660


When you re-installed Vista, did you delete all of the partitions that had the counterfeit copy on it? If you just clicked next without formatting the main partition, the setup makes a folder called "Windows.old", which contains all of the files from the previous install. That's probably why Avast detected the viruses again.
 

jadebrain

Distinguished
Nov 1, 2011
40
0
18,530


I didn't delete any partitions; I still have a bunch of data that I'd like to recover. Unless the data in the "Windows.old" folder is compressed, I don't think it would have worked, since the data that would be stored within used up more than half the space on my hard drive... unless, of course, if by "all of the files from the previous install," you're only referring to the OS files, and not any data from third-party programs?
 

Benkberg97

Reputable
Jun 4, 2015
66
0
4,660


The "Windows.old" folder only contain files that were stored on the machine before you re-formatted. It does not store program files from third-party applications, such as Avast or Google Chrome. You can recover the data from the folder, such as documents, music, pictures etc, but any downloaded or installed 3rd party programs will need to be reinstalled.