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- åProtection
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- The Disinfectant application by itself will not protect your system against
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- infection. It will only locate and repair previously infected files and disks.
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- To protect your system against infection, you must install a protection
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- extension (protection INIT).
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- Disinfectant includes such a protection INIT. When properly installed, it
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- will protect your system against all of the known non-HyperCard
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- Macintosh viruses.
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- WARNING: The Disinfectant protection INIT will not protect your system
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- against unknown viruses! If a new virus appears, we will have to release
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- a new version of Disinfectant to recognize it.
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- Use the “Install Protection INIT” command in the “Protect” menu to
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- install the Disinfectant INIT in your currently active Extensions folder
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- (under System 7) or in your currently active System folder (under
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- System 6). You must restart your Macintosh to activate the INIT.
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- Use the “Save Protection INIT” command in the “Protect” menu to save
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- a copy of the Disinfectant INIT to any location of your choosing.
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- The Disinfectant INIT is simple, small, efficient, and unobtrusive. It does
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- not need to be configured. In fact, it has no control panel interface at all,
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- so it cannot be configured. The INIT will never ask you to make a decision.
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- It should have no noticeable effect on the performance of your Mac. It is
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- very small and can easily be used on floppy startup disks (e.g., in
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- university labs with floppy-only Macs). The INIT does not interfere with
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- the normal operation of Disinfectant or other anti-viral applications, or
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- with programming environments, installer applications, or other system
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- software.
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- If you run an application which is infected by one of the known Mac
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- viruses, the Disinfectant INIT beeps ten times, quits the application, and
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- presents an alert. For example, if the application “MacWrite” is infected
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- by the nVIR virus, the following alert appears when you try to run
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- MacWrite:
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- The Disinfectant INIT only detects and blocks viruses; it does not remove
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- them. To remove a virus, you must use the Disinfectant application.
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- With System 6, if you use a disk which is infected by the WDEF virus or
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- by the CDEF virus, the Disinfectant INIT beeps ten times, presents an
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- alert, and temporarily neutralizes the virus. You can safely use the disk;
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- the virus will not spread. To remove the virus from the disk, you can
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- either rebuild the Desktop file or use the Disinfectant application.
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- Rebuilding the Desktop file is usually easier.
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- If you use a HyperCard stack which is infected by the MacMag virus, the
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- Disinfectant INIT beeps ten times, presents an alert, and temporarily
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- neutralizes the virus. You can safely use the stack; the virus will not
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- spread. You should use the Disinfectant application to remove the virus
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- from the stack.
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- If you have an INIT file which is infected by the INIT 1984 virus, when the
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- virus attacks during startup, the Disinfectant INIT beeps ten times, and an
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- alert is presented at the end of the startup sequence. The virus is
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- neutralized and does not spread or cause any damage, but the non-viral
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- part of the infected INIT runs as usual.
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- The name of the Disinfectant INIT begins with a special invisible
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- character. This special character does not appear in Finder windows. In
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- standard file dialogs and in some other contexts, it appears as a box.
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- The special symbol is present to force the Disinfectant INIT to be the first
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- INIT loaded when you start up your Macintosh. This is important: the
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- Disinfectant INIT should be loaded first! If you rename the INIT, make
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- certain that you rename it so that it comes first in alphabetical order in
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- your Extensions folder or your System folder. With System 7, be very
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- careful to leave the INIT in the Extensions folder. Do not move it to the
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- System folder proper or to the Control Panels folder. To avoid problems,
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- we recommend that you do not rename the INIT.
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- The reason the Disinfectant INIT should be loaded first is to properly
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- detect and block the INIT 1984 virus, which spreads from INIT to INIT at
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- startup time. If the Disinfectant INIT does not load first, and if some
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- earlier INIT is infected by the INIT 1984 virus, then the Disinfectant INIT
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- will not be able to detect or block the virus when it attacks during
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- startup.
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- A number of other popular INITs also have the requirement that they
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- should be loaded first. Before installing such an INIT, scan it with the
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- Disinfectant application to make certain it is not infected by the INIT 1984
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- virus or any other virus. Then install it. Depending on how the INIT is
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- named, it may load before or after the Disinfectant INIT. Don’t worry if
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- the other INIT loads first. You have already made certain that it is not
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- infected, so it shouldn’t cause any problems.
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- The Disinfectant INIT icon should appear at the bottom of your screen
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- every time you restart your Macintosh. If an error occurs and the INIT
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- cannot load properly, the INIT will beep ten times and it will draw a
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- special error version of the icon (the normal icon with a large “X”
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- superimposed.)
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- The Disinfectant INIT icon normally appears first in the row of INIT icons
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- which appear when you restart. One exception to this is under System 6
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- with Apple’s Communications Toolbox installed. The Communications
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- Toolbox icon may appear first, in which case the Disinfectant INIT icon
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- appears second.
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- If you wish to remove the Disinfectant INIT for some reason, open your
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- Extensions folder (under System 7) or your System folder (under System
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- 6) and drag the INIT icon to the trash (or anywhere else outside of the
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- System folder). Then restart your Macintosh.
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- Contrary to the instructions found in many software manuals, it is not
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- necessary to remove the Disinfectant INIT when installing software.
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- There are no known cases where the Disinfectant INIT interferes in any
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- way with installers.
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- The Disinfectant INIT detects and blocks viruses at their initial point of
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- attack. Unlike some other virus protection INITs, it does not scan floppies
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- each time they are inserted into a disk drive and it does not scan files
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- each time they are opened. This strategy is what makes the Disinfectant
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- INIT so small and efficient.
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- The Disinfectant INIT will not detect files which are partially infected but
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- not contagious, since these kinds of infections never attack the system.
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- These non-contagious infections are harmless, so this is not a major
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- problem. The Disinfectant application does detect these kinds of infections.
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