![]() I would also say the files you've listed are JSON files. And rather than blindly trusting your AV in all cases, you're free to apply a bit more nuance and skepticism towards it. So to my mind it's much much more likely Windows Defender is being overly aggressive and conservative in this case. Valve checks all the data published to it, and the number of legitimate issues of malicious files being served to users is pretty small. Than it is to say something isn't a trojan and be wrong. But when the AV is flagging something you think may be incorrect, or is flagging something you trust, nothing is stopping you from doing some additional research to confirm or dismiss the result.Īfter all it's better for an AV to say something is a trojan and be wrong. When your AV finds something you can choose to trust it blindly. Are you aware of the possibility of false positives? Originally posted by nullable:AV's aren't infallible. So, if its those 3, which are garboware chinese AVs, simply report the files on the steam beta branch discussion forums, and it will get taken care of eventually Those 3 in particular are super prone to false positives with steam, and have been for years. The only time it may not be, is if you are using the old "arg matey" and not getting your contents directly from steams website. This being said, 1/60, especially from some of the following (Zillya, Rising, Jiangmin, etc) are most certainly false positives. If you upload your file to VT, then you can see exactly why it was detected. Steam, every once in a while, the steam.exe, steamwebhelper.exe and some of its bundled packages get flagged. It is not unheard of for AVs to pick them up. Should I do something manually now to be safer or does that count as solved?Īnd also, the bigger topic on my mind why i decided to write on this forum, how did it get there? is it a false positive? When i googled my exact problem as im writing here i didnt get any answers, and when i googled the specific malware names, i found that those can be the very dangerous malwares people get scammed with, like in emails or when downloading anything, but i swear i did not encounter any suspicious messages nor did i download anything in the recent days (the windows defender notified me 3 hours ago) ![]() I clicked to "remove" these files in the WD, but i gotta confess, i didnt get any malicious files in a long time and im not exactly sure how that works. Windows Defender found trojans (specifically Trojan:Script/Wacatac.B!ml and Trojan:Script/ObfusScript.A!ml) in this steam path: C:\xy\Steam\steamui\localization\ and then files shared_koreana-json.js, shared_thai-json.js, and shared_vietnamese-json.js ![]()
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