![]() ![]() Of couse my next move was uninstalling the autoclicker with the uninstall file that was inside the folder. Also, the fact that "TheFastestMouseClicker" was installed at pretty much the same time catched my eye. "Up8d76c_12957" was the folder where these "updates" were installed. After installing Remote Process Explorer and searching the location of the processes, I found this: I used a more general "processes that stop running when task manager opens" and I stumbled upon this thread. Strangely enough, searching the app name "update_2021112022." didn't produce any results. ![]() and would start again a bit after closing Task Manager. To my surprise, the moment I opened task manager the processes dissapeared and CPU usage went back to normal. However since OGH doesn't allow to find more information about the processes running, I quickly went to the task manager to find, hopefully, the root of the problem. Those two strange "update" processes were using a lot of my CPU. Since OGH would show the processes that are consuming more resources, I quickly identified the culprits: I recently noted that my CPU usage was higuer than normal even when my laptop was idle. I use an HP pavillion laptop, it comes integrated with an app called "Omen Gaming Hub"(to which i'll refer as OGH for brevity) that monitors pc performance and serves as a companion for games. I was having a similar problem although the files were different. I'll keep monitoring this and keep this post updated if i see something else again.Īlso thanks everyone for your suggestions. It's been 30-40min i'm working on my PC, nothing is popping up like before, or those file is recreating like other viruses do. Some people in reddit said this started when they installed cracked version of Hitman 3, I did the same too :_: so maybe this was the culprit. So i've deleted both of them (unarchiver.exe file which is about 200mb and ContentManagement in task scheduler)įile location ( C:\Users\Windows 10\AppData\Roaming\ unarchiver) Until i found remote process explorer which worked wellĪnd i've found something called unarchiver.exe was using 25% of my cpu means 100% on core1 of my 4 core cpu.Īnd after searching about this on google i've also found that ContentManagement in task scheduler starts this unarchiver.exe every 15min I've tried many monitoring software, even with those software this virus treated them like task manager, So it disappeared instantly from those too If not specified, the program attempts to auto-detect the encoding used.First of all you should do full scan of your drives,įor me this didn't work cause the file which was running in backgrounds can't be detect as virus even with Malwarebytes The encoding to use for filenames in the archive, when it is not known. If not specified, then either the encoding given by the -encoding option or the auto-detected encoding is used. The encoding to use for the password for the archive, when it is not known. The password to use for decrypting protected archives. gz file and not its contents.Ĭopy the file modification time from the archive file to the containing directory, if one is created. Never create a containing directory for the contents of the unpacked archive.ĭo not attempt to extract archives contained in other archives. By default, a directory is created if there is more than one top-level file or folder. If null, tmp dir will created automaticallyĪlways create a containing directory for the contents of the unpacked archive. If true, a random subfolder will created for each unpack operation in target dir. The directory to write the contents of the archive to. ![]()
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