Your Windows has been BANNED has returned!
"Your Windows Has Been Banned" is a nasty of piece of malware
that first surfaced in 2016. It locks your computer screen and displays a
message stating "This PC has been banned for terms of use
violations."
It doesn’t go into specifics for the ban --
because, obviously, it’s not a real ban -- but simply says that your PC has
been locked in order to "protect the Windows service and its
members," adding "Microsoft does not provide details about specific
PC bans."
In order to unlock the system, the malware
originally stated the victim should call technicians purporting to be from
Microsoft and buy a code to unlock the screen, and purchase a new Windows
license.
Thankfully, Michael Gillespie, creator of ID Ransomeware, discovered that you could unlock the infected
computer free of charge simply by entering "6666666666666666" or
"XP8BF-F8HPF-PY6BX-K24PJ-RAA00" as the code and that was for the old
malware.
It would have been nice if that was the end
of the matter, but it’s hard to keep a good malware scam down, and "Your
Windows Has Been Banned" has returned once more, this time with an even
more illiterate lock screen, demanding $50 in Bitcoin to unlock the infected
Windows operating system.
The new error message kindly gives victims
two choices -- they can pay the $50 to buy a new Windows key (or $200 in some
greedier variations), or have all data deleted and the PC rendered unusable.
It’s a classic scareware tactic, and one that unfortunately the less
technically astute -- and of course the elderly -- could well fall for, even
though it should be clear from the spelling mistakes and bad grammar that this
nothing more than a scam.
The trick to avoiding malware like this is,
as always, to never open suspicious files, or click on mysterious or dubious
links. You should also protect your system with a decent, up to date
anti-malware application.
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