This is the third time in a month and second time in only a few days when AVG issues bogus definition files. However, since this information was not confirmed by AVG officials, it should be treated as such. Other users reported that the problem only affected version 8 of the antivirus product, while users of version 7.5 did not encounter the issue. AVG has not commented on this new incident, but according to a forum moderator, the problem has been fixed. The file is actually an Adobe Flash Player 10 utility, which is used to automatically check for updates and also see if the player has been properly installed. This was caused by a faulty definition file that was pushed to users on Friday and followed a similar incident that occurred earlier this week, when the product wrongly identified a Windows component as malware and "cleaned" it.Īccording to user reports, the antivirus identified the flashUtil10a.exe file as Trojan Horse. Users of the popular AVG antivirus product reported on the company's support forum that an Adobe flash component had been detected as a generic password stealing Trojan.
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