Trojan.Horse.Win32.PAV.64.a removal is a motive for installation of rogue antispyware. The real reason is another trojan introduction and a set of alerts it generates. That is, let us clarify. There is a trojan, which is a scary name and is mentioned in alerts generated by real trojan related to fake antispyware. You need to delete the real trojan that generates tricky alerts referring to Trojan.Horse.Win32.PAV.64.a, which is just a name used to malware advertising purpose. The peculiarity is the title of popups shown by the tricky trojan as their title reads as follows: "Microsoft Security Essential Alert".
The tricky scheme is currently used to promote Windows Security & Control (Windows Security and Control) adware, but this is not the first occasion of its engagement into rogue antispyware trickeries. Windows Optimization & Security had been promoted in the same way before the release of adware in question.
Removal of Windows Security & Control rogue antispyware in an extended sense should cover the relevant trojan that lures users to download the scamware. Click here to get rid of Windows Security & Control in any sense performing PC purification on comprehensive basis.
The tricky scheme is currently used to promote Windows Security & Control (Windows Security and Control) adware, but this is not the first occasion of its engagement into rogue antispyware trickeries. Windows Optimization & Security had been promoted in the same way before the release of adware in question.
Removal of Windows Security & Control rogue antispyware in an extended sense should cover the relevant trojan that lures users to download the scamware. Click here to get rid of Windows Security & Control in any sense performing PC purification on comprehensive basis.
Windows Security & Control screenshot:
Windows Security & Control removal tool:
Windows Security & Control manual removal guide:
Delete Windows Security & Control files:
%AppData%\.exe
Delete Windows Security & Control registry entries:
HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\Microsoft\Windows NT\CurrentVersion\Winlogon "Shell" = "%AppData%\.exe"
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