What the heck is a "Fixmestick"???

M

markw

Audioholic Overlord
rojo

rojo

Audioholic Samurai
I've never heard of any of the sources that page is quoting for testimonials. It's probably the cheapest, most worthless 256 meg flash drive loaded with scareware designed to upsell a remote assistance premium service, where the remote techs undo whatever damage the scareware wrought for a nominal fee of $59.95 or something. Looks like a racketeering scam to me. Edit: It's $10 for a month trial, then $60 per year to keep it. That's less scammy than I originally believed, but still exorbitant IMHO.

Sent from my LG-VS980 using Forum Fiend OSP v1.3.3.
 
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Seth=L

Seth=L

Audioholic Overlord
When one of the "testimonials" says "...and you're off to the races." you know something is up.

*cough* exploiting the elderly *cough cough*

Testimonial should read, "and after we sucker you into paying $60 extra remote service charges you'll be off to the races to gamble what little money you had left in the hopes you can get enough to feed yourself and get your prescription because you're on a fixed income!"
 
F

FixMeStick

Audiophyte
I'm a representative from FixMeStick Technologies and just wanted to clear up some confusion. The FixMeStick is not any form of scareware nor does it prompt you with a problem and then ask for money for remote connections. It's purely an external virus-removal device that is configured to run off its own operating system, run multiple anti-virus scanners that detect malware, and then quarantine detected infections. There aren't any hidden, duplicitous charges, and those reviews quoted above were from independent reviewers. We're also very well reviewed on Amazon, so you can read more reviews there if you'd like.

Please feel free to ask any questions as well and I'll try to respond as best I can.
 
Seth=L

Seth=L

Audioholic Overlord
We've enabled it's defense mechanism, RUN FOR YOUR LIVES!!!
 
H

herbu

Audioholic Samurai
I suspect it's the real thing. I've seen 'em use something real similar in a number of TV shows and movies. Just plug it in and Bingo Bango. If they can make one to copy a harddrive in 10 seconds, surely they can find/fix a virus.
 
Alex2507

Alex2507

Audioholic Slumlord
I thought it might be the stick my folks beat me with anytime something went wrong. Alternately it might be a stick I would use now to beat sense into any number of numb skulls. I need one for each hand.
 
C

Chu Gai

Audioholic Samurai
The FixMeStick is a device generally marketed to women and sold online, in BM stores, and mail order. It is sometimes given to women during bridal showers. Typically it is some sort of elongated device that may or may not have the ability to vibrate, rotate, thrust, etc. Used properly, it is capable of delivering copious amounts of pleasure and Fix conditions such as hysteria, depression, loneliness, and whenever a person just needs a quick tune up.
 
rojo

rojo

Audioholic Samurai
I'm a representative from FixMeStick Technologies and just wanted to clear up some confusion. The FixMeStick is not any form of scareware nor does it prompt you with a problem and then ask for money for remote connections. It's purely an external virus-removal device that is configured to run off its own operating system, run multiple anti-virus scanners that detect malware, and then quarantine detected infections. There aren't any hidden, duplicitous charges, and those reviews quoted above were from independent reviewers. We're also very well reviewed on Amazon, so you can read more reviews there if you'd like.

Please feel free to ask any questions as well and I'll try to respond as best I can.
Which OS does it boot? Is it Windows PE? Linux? Which malware scanners are used? ClamAV? AVG? Avast? McAfee Stinger? Hitman Pro?

Does the FixMeStick remotely mount the registry from the hard drive, similar to UBCD4Win? If not, then how does it deal with malware that has messed with the Explorer shell or similar? A couple years ago there were rampant variants that would associate themselves with .exe file types. Removing the infection would render a machine unusable, since Windows didn't know what program to use to open .exe files. The same would go for HKLM\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows NT\CurrentVersion\Winlogon\Shell. Here's a list of others.

Mr. Stick, it's good to know the FixMeStick isn't a racketeering scam. I now see how you make your money, and I'll edit my knee-jerk assumptions above.

The $60 per year license seems a bit steep to me, though, considering Windows Defender / MS Security Essentials, AVG, Avast, ClamWin, and others can be installed for free.

Plus, here's a little known fact. All you other people reading this, your Internet provider does not want you putting infected computers onto their service. ISP's dislike infected clients so much that they almost all offer some sort of commercial antivirus for free for their subscribers. For example, as an Xfinity subscriber, I can log into xfinity.com, click "Support" then "Download security software", and install Norton Security Suite. If you want second opinion software, there are many freely available malware scanners that won't interfere with your primary -- Malwarebytes, SUPERAntiSpyware, Spybot Search & Destroy, and ClamWin, to name a few.

The best prevention comes from paying attention to what you are freaking agreeing to. When you go to download something, don't use that website's recommended download manager to do so. If you're downloading a song or video and the Save As dialog asks you to save an .exe file, cancel the damned download, for goodness sake! When clicking next, next, next, finish on an installer, read! If the installer recommends a toolbar, I recommend avoiding that toolbar with every fiber of your being (even if the opt-out radio button appears grayed out and in 8-point font). Make an effort to notice whether that Google search result is an advertised link or a normal search result. If someone emails you an attachment or hyperlink you weren't expecting, politely reply and ask whether they intended to send that to you before opening it. Be skeptical.

Web browser ad blockers such as uBlock Origin can also help; and NoScript prevents any malicious code from running at all unless you explicitly trust it. (NoScript can be a pain when you first install it, making sure to trust scripts from each legitimate website you visit; but it does help you avoid shooting yourself in the foot.)
 
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