Trouble-Shooter
Member
- Reaction score
- 1
- Location
- Bartow County, Ga. USA
I have been servicing computers for a long time. And as all types of malware become more complex, we find ourselves considering formatting a customer's hard drive much more often. Many of the computer repair shops local to my county seem to have formed a default policy of formatting a malware-ridden hard drive instead of cleaning it. While I understand that cleaning some of the worst malware is a great task that is time consuming, I also believe that formatting by default enables technicians to avoid continued self-education that has always proved invaluable and necessary to our part of the IT industry. Fortunately for the sake of job-security, many versions of malware easily circumvent anti-spyware scans which inevitably leads to our phones ringing. Personally, I make it a point to set myself apart from the other shops by knowing or learning how to remove the worst of the worst, thereby leaving my customer's partitions intact. After all, if all it takes is a program scan to fix every computer problem, we will find ourselves much less necessary to society and industry.
Now, I have a different pricing schedule for my services than the local shops. I charge by the job, and not by the hour. I am a mobile service, so my time spent "out and about" each day is very well planned and deliberate in every way. I spend a lot of time at home(which is my shop, essentially) working on customer's computers, so I do have the luxury of time to endlessly stare at "icon fields" such as the system32 folder.
I feel I can better serve my customer if I know how to remove these bugs and not just format by default. I recently fixed a computer that had 3 of the top-5 highest threats listed on AVG's home page, and I didn't format it. These included WinAntivirus, Zlob (multiple variants), and honestly I can't remember the other one at the moment.
I'm not saying a format should never be necessary, but I think it is an overused practice. Hearing the techs talk at the other local shops, it is borderline unethical the way they jump to that end so quickly. Maybe I'm just stubborn. What do you think?
Now, I have a different pricing schedule for my services than the local shops. I charge by the job, and not by the hour. I am a mobile service, so my time spent "out and about" each day is very well planned and deliberate in every way. I spend a lot of time at home(which is my shop, essentially) working on customer's computers, so I do have the luxury of time to endlessly stare at "icon fields" such as the system32 folder.
I feel I can better serve my customer if I know how to remove these bugs and not just format by default. I recently fixed a computer that had 3 of the top-5 highest threats listed on AVG's home page, and I didn't format it. These included WinAntivirus, Zlob (multiple variants), and honestly I can't remember the other one at the moment.
I'm not saying a format should never be necessary, but I think it is an overused practice. Hearing the techs talk at the other local shops, it is borderline unethical the way they jump to that end so quickly. Maybe I'm just stubborn. What do you think?