False positive creates havoc
A faulty signature
update from McAfee flagged up legitimate application files as infected with a low-risk virus,
CTX.
The dodgy anti-virus update (4715 DAT), issued on Friday, March 10, falsely identified a number of component files of Microsoft Office applications and some Windows systems files as infectious. Along with Microsoft Excel, components of Adobe Update Manager, Macromedia Flash Player and Google Toolbar were falsely labeled as viral. McAfee has produced a seven page list of files known to trigger incorrect identification here (
PDF).
McAfee has released a new update along with a tool designed to recover legitimate system and application files from quarantine (the default setting). But that's not much use to users that had set their software to auto-delete infected files, who've found themselves with hosed systems.
"We are manually reinstalling, MS Excel, Java Runtimes, and Adobe. A lot of my little network management packages are clobbered as well. Little key generator programs to make WPA keys, Kazaa lite, Spybot S&D, Procomm Plus, all deleted," one
Reg sysadmin reader writes. "We set our secondary option to delete because we felt we may have had a worm at the time. We've run their product successfully for four to five years."
Faulty anti-virus signature updates are not uncommon across the industry. However the latest McAfee snafu affects a far wider range of commonly-installed files than is normally the case, causing a wider range of problems.
The REGister