"pcbutts1" <pcbutts1@leythosthestalker.com> wrote in news:eI-
dna2eF7gBwiDYnZ2dnUVZ_qidnZ2d@giganews.com:

> W32/ZlobX.GCO


Tsk... Pc Butts, F-prot also considers the file bad. Want to email them so
I can see for sure?

Considering the application has signatures for over 5,000 programs, it's
entirely possible for it to mistake an innocent file for a bad one.

False alarms are a part of life with signature based detection technology.
Of course I wouldn't expect you to know anything about this, since your
script doesn't make use of signatured detection.

As for false alarms, Pcbutts, you don't actually know first hand if it does
or not. If the original authors deliberatly sabotaged a version in the
hopes you'd steal it, you'd introduce whatever bugs and intentional
failures they installed. Why is this? Because spyerase isn't yours, and you
can't read code. be it script, assembly or another form of text.




--
Dustin Cook
Author of BugHunter - MalWare Removal Tool - V2.1
web: http://bughunter.it-mate.co.uk
email: bughunter.dustin@gmail.com.removethis
Last updated: January 28th, 2007