Malicious Software Removal Tool MRT.exe bogus infected files?
MRT.exe, if you run it explicitly (say download it
after the second Tuesday from Microsoft instead of getting it from Windows Update) during its scan reports 4 infected files, but at the end reports no files infected. Apparently it does this on any XP machine. I'd guess some standard files match the virus pattern and they ignore those matches at the end. It's a little quick but it seems to be in the JavaScript general area of quick scan. -- On the internet, nobody knows you're a jerk. |
Malicious Software Removal Tool MRT.exe bogus infected files?
On Sat, 11 Jun 2016 11:12:23 -0400, Ron Hardin wrote:
MRT.exe, if you run it explicitly (say download it after the second Tuesday from Microsoft instead of getting it from Windows Update) during its scan reports 4 infected files, but at the end reports no files infected. It's glitch that proofs anti viruses use white-listing. |
Malicious Software Removal Tool MRT.exe bogus infected files?
JJ wrote:
On Sat, 11 Jun 2016 11:12:23 -0400, Ron Hardin wrote: MRT.exe, if you run it explicitly (say download it after the second Tuesday from Microsoft instead of getting it from Windows Update) during its scan reports 4 infected files, but at the end reports no files infected. It's glitch that proofs anti viruses use white-listing. That's not a mistake. The legitimate files do something that would be suspicious in an imported file so they check for it. If it's the legitimate file, they ignore it. But that's guesswork. I can't run the modern AVG antivirus because it quarantines some .dll components of the old Cygwin version I use, which defeats the whole point of the computer. That needs whitelisting. -- On the internet, nobody knows you're a jerk. |
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