Today girlfriend told me that their company actually check their QQ chat records, for such a company I can only say x, well, write a script to clean up the local QQ chat records, and then to find the machine has installed monitoring software.
System: Windows
Software: QQ 2013
The following is a bat script I wrote to clean up the QQ chat record, which reads as follows:
Copy Code code as follows:
@echo off
taskkill/f/im Qq.exe
taskkill/f/im Qqprotect.exe
taskkill/f/im Txplatfirm.exe
CD C:\Documents and Settings\Administrator\My documents\tencent files\qq number
del/f/s/q msg2.0.db
Echo.&pause
The script probably means:
First kill the QQ process, and then to clean up the QQ number in the chat record, this can only say the whole half, then to see if the machine has monitoring software.
Another netizen sent a back-deep convincing QQ chat monitoring batch process, the contents are as follows:
Copy Code code as follows:
@echo off
Title Prohibition Monitoring!
: Start
Cls
Echo.
@echo It is shameful to monitor the privacy of others!
Echo.&pause
@echo is ending the process of monitoring software!
taskkill/f/im Arpguard.exe
taskkill/f/im Ingress.exe
taskkill/f/im Srport.exe
taskkill/f/im Zreboot.exe
taskkill/f/im Zrupdate.exe
Echo.
@echo are renaming the directory of the monitoring software!
ren "C:\Program files\sinfor" "Fuckyousinfor"
Echo.
@echo is disabling the monitoring software boot up!
net stop Zrupdate
sc config zrupdate start= DISABLED
Echo.
@echo if not an accident, the reverse monitoring has been processed, press any key to exit it!
Echo.&pause
Well, if it's other monitoring software, you can modify it according to the script above.