The Bthudtask.exe program removes a pairing with a remote Bluetooth device that has the specified service ID. This scheduled task runs the Bthudtask.exe program at an elevated permissions level. Multiple Provider Router DLL Microsoft Corporation. DTProAgent.exe 3364 DAEMON Tools Pro Tray Application DT Soft Ltd. RtHDVCpl.exe 3252 HD Audio Control Panel Realtek Semiconductor. There is a monitoring and maintenance software package on these computers that include MB 1. The following table describes the scheduled tasks in a default installation of Windows Vista. rundll32.exe 3244 Windows host process (Rundll32) Microsoft Corporation.
#Rundll32 exe mui install#
I can't install the version of MalwareBytes you mention, because MB has already been on and installed for years.
This seems to be a pretty recent type of infection, which nothing has caught up to yet. I traced them to some folders in the user's LocalLow directory (CottonVisual, ReceiverRadio, ReceiverSync) that are recreated even if deleted. The browser.exe processes are task-killable, but pop up shortly afterward. Chrome is installed on the PC, but it was not in use, and I was instead seeing dozes of "browser.exe" processes running, and also "werfault.exe"s as the errors built up. Yesterday, however, users reported "Chrome Errors" popping up on-screen where it would crash. The tdss-detected trojans remained gone and the dllhost.exe processes never returned, and things seemed OK. Following that, I allowed the onboard A/V and anti-malware (Vipre Business and MalwareBytes) to run manual scans, along with SuperAntiSpyware portable. I ran normal cleanup tools up to and including tdsskiller (which cured two trojans infecting c:\Windows\system32\rpcss.dll - identified as "DcomLaunch" and "RpcSs" services), rkill, JRT, adwcleaner, and combofix. Taking a look, there were dozens of dllhost.exe processes running, taking up memory space largely in the 30MB to 250MB range. Two days ago I was called in because the computer was operating slowly.