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Kill.com |
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LightsOnLogan
Admin Group Joined: 11 Oct 2007 Online Status: Offline Posts: 3187 |
Quote Reply Posted: 12 Sep 2012 at 3:44pm |
I don't know the process with AVG. With Avast I had to restore it from the virus chest, then temporarily shut down protection, then generate the MD5 hash, and then restart protection.
I submitted a false positive with Avast. I encourage you to do the same with AVG. For performance reasons it is unlikely that any antivirus actually looks at every byte in a file. While they don't reveal their secrets, it is probable that they look at a handful of bytes and the total file size to figure out if it is a threat or not. This Aurora file just happens to match the pattern when it isn't a threat. Interestingly, I can get the file to pass Antivirus testing if I comment out the lines which shut down the DMX-over-dongle server (the 2009-2011 DMX patch). Michael Edited by LightsOnLogan - 12 Sep 2012 at 3:45pm |
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BigDPS
Beta Testers Joined: 13 Dec 2007 Online Status: Offline Posts: 471 |
Quote Reply Posted: 12 Sep 2012 at 5:07pm |
After disabling my AVG, I did manage to hash it and it gave me the 246b990f9acff3958f6a551889ae2339 number you had. I will tell AVG about the false positive.
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LightsOnLogan
Admin Group Joined: 11 Oct 2007 Online Status: Offline Posts: 3187 |
Quote Reply Posted: 13 Sep 2012 at 11:07am |
I'm just glad this was caught now instead of December; this is the type of thing that usually pops up around then and makes a support nightmare (does anyone happen to remember Windows Update replacing the FTDI drivers right in the middle of the 2009 season?)
Michael |
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BigDPS
Beta Testers Joined: 13 Dec 2007 Online Status: Offline Posts: 471 |
Quote Reply Posted: 13 Sep 2012 at 6:16pm |
Windows likes to change things around as they will. It likes to keep us on the edge....
As for killcom, it appears like my AVG hasn't seen it as a threat today when it scanned it. I wonder if AVG changed its heuristic files already? |
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ibewill
Newbie Joined: 22 Apr 2012 Online Status: Offline Posts: 21 |
Quote Reply Posted: 03 Dec 2012 at 11:14am |
I have been dealing with the kill.com problem for a while and mine problem is even worse. Norton Security Suite that Comcast gives free to customers is quarantining Kill.com and the entire Aurora Sequencer and Scheduler software. If I try to open either, there is no file to open with. I have to reopen the original download file that fixes Aurora then open Aurora Sequencer or Scheduler immediately after. Norton thinks its so bad I can't exclude aurora. Hope not to deal with this next year. Adding this to my other problems have been frustrating.
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LightChristmas
Beta Testers Joined: 15 Oct 2007 Location: Equality, IL Online Status: Offline Posts: 993 |
Quote Reply Posted: 03 Dec 2012 at 3:24pm |
Easy solution. Get rid of Norton and use AVG-Free. Just as good if not better, and making file exceptions is much easier.
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