Members
  • Total Members: 14197
  • Latest: Levine
Stats
  • Total Posts: 43435
  • Total Topics: 16529
  • Online today: 3056
  • Online ever: 51419
  • (01. January 2010., 10:27:49)
Users Online
Users: 3
Guests: 2978
Total: 2981









Post reply

Name:
Email:
Subject:
Message icon:

Verification:
Type the letters shown in the picture
Listen to the letters / Request another image

Type the letters shown in the picture:
Second Anti-Bot trap, type or simply copy-paste below (only the red letters):www.codekids.ba:

shortcuts: hit alt+s to submit/post or alt+p to preview


Topic Summary

Posted by: Samker
« on: 17. May 2010., 21:19:18 »



World of Warcraft denizens are complaining that an anti-virus update published by Symantec over the weekend falsely labelled a component of the game as potentially malign.

Instead of throwing spells or wielding axes, fans of the role-playing game who choose Symantec for their security protection complain that the firms is listing benign scan.dll.new library as an information stealer. Multiple posts on a WoW forum suggest that the problem is far from isolated: http://forums.wow-europe.com/thread.html?topicId=13525762488&sid=1&pageNo=1

We asked Symantec if it could shed any light on the situation on Monday lunchtime, but have yet to hear back.

There's been a rash of false positives involving anti-virus products over recent months, as the Internet Storm Centre notes: http://isc.sans.org/diary.html?storyid=8803
Issues with false alerts and security suites are becoming more common despite improvements in system architecture simply because the increased number of malware threats, estimated at 50,000 a day, are forcing suppliers to publish updates far more frequently.

Where the false positive involves applications files, such as the latest Symantec and Warcraft case, temporary inconvenience results. Things get a lot more serious in cases where system files are flagged as potentially malign, a problem that left substantial numbers of corporate PCs running McAfee unusable last month.

Days later a gang of guerilla marketeers turned up at the Infosec show in London wearing hoodies brandishing the slogan "You were only supposed to blow up the bloody viruses" in an Italian Job-themed dig at the security giant over the incident.

(El Reg)

Enter your email address to receive daily email with 'SCforum.info - Samker's Computer Forum' newest content:

Kursevi programiranja za ucenike u Sarajevu

Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Advertising
TinyPortal 2.3.1 © 2005-2023