From: Wile E. Coyote on
Dustin Cook wrote:

> The internet doesn't follow laws of any particular country or nation. Once
> your data leaves your PC, you have absolutely no guarantee which "wires" in
> which country are going to be carrying that information. Basically, your
> rights don't apply anywhere except in your country.
>
>
That works both ways.

What about that file anyway?
From: Wile E. Coyote on
Andy Walker wrote:

> Almost all free services make money on your information.

Not if I don't give them any information that is real. See? That's how
naive I am not.
From: Dustin Cook on
"Wile E. Coyote" <coyote(a)ACME.invalid> wrote in
news:NkRSm.58970$de6.55698(a)newsfe21.iad:

> Dustin Cook wrote:
>
>> The internet doesn't follow laws of any particular country or nation.
>> Once your data leaves your PC, you have absolutely no guarantee which
>> "wires" in which country are going to be carrying that information.
>> Basically, your rights don't apply anywhere except in your country.
>>
>>
> That works both ways.
>
> What about that file anyway?
>

The researcher responsible for that sample hasn't reported back yet.
However, it most likely is a false positive and should be cleared up soon.



--
Dustin Cook [Malware Researcher]
MalwareBytes - http://www.malwarebytes.org
BugHunter - http://bughunter.it-mate.co.uk
From: Wile E. Coyote on
Dustin Cook wrote:

> The researcher responsible for that sample hasn't reported back yet.
> However, it most likely is a false positive and should be cleared up soon.

OK, thanks. The problem isn't Malwarebytes so much because I don't have
that running resident. It's Avira that is annoying me every time it
finds that file it nags me about it no matter how many times I tell it
to ignore it. I guess the setting to ignore is not sticking because it
doesn't run with admin rights.