> ...There has never been a third-party security product
> installed on this system, including AV, anti-spyware, or firewalls.
Your cavalier attitude towards security may have landed you in this
situation, I'm afraid.
Protect Your PC!
http://www.microsoft.com/athome/secu...r/default.mspx
If you find no joy in
http://support.microsoft.com/kb/883825 and MS support
can't assist you (see below), the machine may be compromised by an untold
number of infections, so it might be best to format & reinstall...
....then get & keep that machine fully protected.
Good luck!
=================================
Start a free Windows Update support incident request:
https://support.microsoft.com/oas/de...spx?gprid=6527
Support for Windows Update:
http://support.microsoft.com/gp/wusupport
For home users, no-charge support is available by calling 1-866-PCSAFETY in
the United States and in Canada or by contacting your local Microsoft
subsidiary. There is no-charge for support calls that are associated with
security updates.
For more information about how to contact your local Microsoft subsidiary
for security update support issues, visit the International Support Web
site:
http://support.microsoft.com/common/international.aspx
For enterprise customers, support for security updates is available through
your usual support contacts.
--
~Robear Dyer (PA Bear)
MS MVP-Windows (IE, OE, Security, Shell/User)
AumHa VSOP & Admin; DTS-L.net
El Frusto wrote:
> Hi PA Bear, thanks for the response...
>
>> Are you running Vista or Vista SP1
>
> Vista SP1.
>
>> What anti-virus application or security suite is *installed* (not
>> necessarily "running")? What anti-spyware applications (other than
>> Defender)? What third-party firewall (if any)?
>
> Actually none. There has never been a third-party security product
> installed on this system, including AV, anti-spyware, or firewalls. The
> system was installed fresh last year from an authentic off-the-shelf Vista
> CD, so there is not even any preloaded vendor trial security software
> installed.
>
> The system does run World of Warcraft which has a spyware-like thing
> called
> "Warden". That was not running when the update was attempted.
>
> If this is useful to know, all other updates before and after that one
> have
> succeeded, and all programs and applications on the system are functioning
> normally.
>
>
>> The process cannot access the file because it is being used by another
>> process
>
> Is there a way to find out which other process is accessing the file?
> I've
> tried shutting down every nonessential program, daemon, and service that I
> can think of to do the update, but no luck so far.
>
> Would appreciate some insight.