It is not a virus - it is a utility to kill uncooperative TSRs or EXE files
that would otherwise require a reboot (much like to linux kill command. I
have used it and it works (sometimes) but I have never known it to affect
other systems (of course, I don't use windows)!

On Thu, Apr 2, 2015 at 11:07 AM, Rugxulo <rugx...@gmail.com> wrote:

> Hi,
>
> "Looked it up" doesn't mean much. Did you upload it or scan it? If all
> you did was search for the filename "killer.exe", then that's not
> exhaustive at all. It could be literally anything. I'm not suggesting
> you keep it around very long (and certainly you shouldn't run it), but
> it's impossible to know what it is just by guessing on name alone.
> Like I said, even antivirus flagging it isn't enough to 100% prove
> anything.
>
>
> On Thu, Apr 2, 2015 at 10:55 AM, Dale E Sterner <sunbeam...@juno.com>
> wrote:
> >
> > I found the file while rewriting autoexec.bat then looked it up with
> > google
> > to see what it is used for. - it said that it is malware used to destroy
> > windows.
> >
> > DS
> >
> > .
> >
> > On Wed, 1 Apr 2015 18:46:12 -0500 Rugxulo <rugx...@gmail.com> writes:
> >> Hi,
> >>
> >> On Apr 1, 2015 12:50 PM, "Dale E Sterner" <sunbeam...@juno.com>
> >> wrote:
> >> >
> >> > After reading google I deleted killer.exe. Check and see if your
> >> copy
> >> > contains it.
> >> > It is installed by the autoexec.bat file and is located in the dos
> >> > directory.
> >>
> >> Just in general ....
> >>
> >> Antiviruses are very notorious for false positives, for both DOS and
> >> Windows software, even extremely innocuous stuff. Heuristics are
> >> usually to
> >> blame. Also, half the time I have to disable real-time protection
> >> because
> >> of such false positives. This is almost worse than having an actual
> >> virus.
> >> It's very inconvenient and not nearly as rare as I'd like.
> >>
> >> Not that I encourage anyone to download this (for various reasons),
> >> but ....
> >>
> >> It would've been better if you had uploaded the suspected file to
> >> http://www.virustotal.com to compare against many antivirus vendors
> >> just to
> >> be sure it wasn't a false positive (although some of them use the
> >> same bad
> >> heuristics). In particular, while not 100% proof, if the file is a
> >> PE .EXE,
> >> then it's "probably" not for DOS.
>
>
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