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No, it's not safe.
You dumb ***, bots do not need to be connected.
And do you think we trust someone that scans his own files?
<hr>Append on Jul 11 2007, 05:06<hr> Wow, it's ******* obvious. Nothing else but two friggin' exe's.
There is no such thing as .exe readme.
Good job master hacker.
Antivir 7.4.0.37 6.39.0.81
BDS/Sub7.215.Srv
ArcaVir 1.0.4 2006.01.27
Trojan.Subseven.215
Avast 1.0.7 0753-0
Nothing found
AVG 7.5.47 269.9.14/883
BackDoor.Delf.17.X
BitDefender 7.60825 7.60825
Backdoor.Subseven.2.15.Dam.2
ClamAV 43 3574
Trojan.SubSeven.215-srv
F-Prot 4.6.6 3.16.14
W32/Subseven.215.A
Norman 5.70.01 5.70.01
Nothing found
Rising 17.00.00.36 19.25.00.00
Trojan.SubSeven.215
VirusBlokAda32 3.12.0.2 2007.07.01
Trojan.Win32.SubSeven.215
VirusBuster 4.3.23:9 (2007-02-16) 9.86.8/11.0
Backdoor.SubSeven.H
Backdoor.Win32.Delf.vb
This Trojan program provides a remote malicious user with full control over the infected machine. The Trojan itself is a Windows PE EXE file, written in Borland Delphi and packed using ASPack. The packed file is approximately 293KB in size, and the unpacked file is approximately 795KB in size.
Backdoor.SubSeven.215
Backdoor.SubSeven.215 is a variant of the SubSeven family. This Trojan Horse allows unauthorized access to an infected machine. By default it listens on port 11142.
Now **** off.
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