I just installed BD this week (I'm a BD newbie) and it detected 2 of these Generic.Peed.Eml viruses, one in each of two of my Eudora mailboxes (.mbx). They could not be removed from the .mbx files without deleting the whole files (each .mbx contains a history of email messages) and so BD said they could not be removed because they were part of an archive. However, it did give me the message number, and using that I was able to figure out which email message was the problem. I opened up the .mbx files in a text editor and manually removed that email message. It seems to have worked!
Your message number is 19956, that's a lot of messages to go through. Mine were smaller mailboxes (one was message number 65, the other was message number 139, or something like that). I found them by opening the mailbox folder in Eudora, turn off any sorting, select the very first message, then scroll down and keep adding to the selection (by holding down the shift key) until I had exactly 65 messages selected (the number selected shows up in the little box under the list of message headers). The 65th one was the one with the virus. I was able to look at the subject line and date, and then search for that when I opened the .mbx in my text editor. I was careful to delete the whole message (and nothing else) in my text editor.
In both mailboxes, the affected email message was a copy of a "greeting card" I had sent to someone from Regards.com (I guess I won't do that again!).
BTW, I used McAfee and Eset before and neither of these detected these Generic.Peed.Eml viruses, not sure why they didn't, or if these messages are not really viruses???
QUOTE (pj48 @ Nov 20 2008, 08:31 AM)

[removed] found Generic.Peed.Eml.B55C15CB in mail_folder1\Inbox1=>(message 19956). It is the only thing found on my computer that I have not been able to remove.
I use Eudora and the individual messages in eudora look like this in the folder:
!%26!AAAAAAAAAAAYAAAAAAAAANg6RdF1IxZFvO5saKz%2BMcXCgAAAEAAAAI7VfcL8co1HjedXz4%2Bc4n4BAAAAAA%3D%3D%40red7media.com
There is no corresponding 19956 number to delete the infected email. Does anyone know what is usually containted in a Generic.Peed.Eml.B55C15CB email so I can search the body of the messages and remove it that way?