The Psychedelic Socialist
ClioSport Club Member
At work we've just had Windows Defender flag up a Trojan which, after a bit of a slog, appears to have been successfully removed.
Problem is that it was identified in Thunderbird which we use, via IMAP, for our email (hosted through Google). In defender, it identified the Trojan but simply stated the location as (something like) C;\users\..\..\..\Inbox.zip. That file doesn't technically exist on the disc, but Thunderbird does have two 'Inbox' datafiles so I assume Defender was simply scanning within those files. What I want to try to do is to find out how I can identify the actual email in which the virus was found.
Is this even possible?
Problem is that it was identified in Thunderbird which we use, via IMAP, for our email (hosted through Google). In defender, it identified the Trojan but simply stated the location as (something like) C;\users\..\..\..\Inbox.zip. That file doesn't technically exist on the disc, but Thunderbird does have two 'Inbox' datafiles so I assume Defender was simply scanning within those files. What I want to try to do is to find out how I can identify the actual email in which the virus was found.
Is this even possible?