April 23, 20206 yr Hi - I recently received notification that there is an upgrade available to v1.10 After downloading the update from the relevant 3rd party, Microsoft Defender immediately flagged the zip / exe file with a severe virus warning. As a precaution, I removed the data from my PC. Anyone else had this issue? This message is also mentioned in the original posting of the originally free product made available back in March. Herman🤨 PC Intel i9-9900KF | Asus ROG STRIX Z390-E GAMING motherboard | Corsair 64GB DDR4-3200 RAM | 2+4TB Samsung 970 EVO PLUS M.2 SSD's | 3x 6TB Seagate 7200rpm harddisks | Gigabyte Aorus Xtreme RTX2080 Ti 11GB video card | Edifier 2000 speakers | Trustmaster T.1600M Hotas + CH Pedals | P3DV5.3 😃
April 23, 20206 yr Hi Herman, I have also experienced the same issue with the new update. The issue remains even after I deactivated Kaspersky and dowloaded the file from Simmarket. I did not have any problems with the original file when it was offered free on Simmarket. It remains in quarantine until I have more info on it. Otherwise I will reinstall the original file. Milton
April 23, 20206 yr According to Simmarket it is just a false-positive. They recommend disabling the AV-software during install. Milton
April 23, 20206 yr That is the reaction one would expect from Simmarket. Atco, a user who is active at Alpha India Group and at Avsim, reported the same problem. After disabling the AV-software he got an infection with Win32/Jeefo; a virus that attached itself to every exe on the C drive (Source: https://www.alpha-india.net/forums/index.php?topic=33356.msg332013#new) Right now I would stay away from the Calvi update and NOT disable the AV-software Best, Christoph Display resolution: 1920x1080 (8xSSAA) GPU: 1080TI CPU: i7-7700K (5.0 OC) RAM: 16GB SSD: Samsung 850Evo Monitor: 27K
April 23, 20206 yr Hello the same issue here, I just contacted Simmarket and asked for correction of installer. Rado Rado i7 4770K@4,1Ghz HT on since release of MSFS1080 Ti 11GB 32GB DDR3 RAMSamsung SSDs
April 23, 20206 yr Well, I did install the update but did not run it in FSX. So I just uninstalled the update and deleted the download-file from Simmarket. Running a complete scan with Kaspersky to verify all the drives.
April 23, 20206 yr I can think of a couple other times the “advice” to disable AV to install turned out to be...not a great idea. Or even (*cough* FSL *cough*) was hiding something more sinister. Another one of those things we as a community have gradually normalized that to an outsider would seem totally bonkers! James
April 23, 20206 yr thats a good point honanhal. I still have that thought. "Wait what. disable my antivurus?" Flight sim is the only software that has ever had this requirement that i've ever seen. 5800X3D, 4090FE, 64GB DDR4 3600C16, Gigabyte X570S MB, EVO 970 M.2's, Alienware 3821DW and 2 22" monitors, Corsair RM1000x PSU, 360MM MSI MEG, MFG Crosswind, T16000M Stick, Boeing TCA Yoke/Throttle, Skalarki MCDU and FCU, Logitech Radio Panel/Switch Panel, Spad.Next
April 23, 20206 yr I installed it while I had my virus scanner disabled because of the initial warning. As soon as I turned it back on it alarmed me again and I followed its directions. Did a complete check today and all seems fine. The reported virus has been removed. Scenery installed ok. Doesn't look like a false positive to me. Menno i7-11700, 16GB, 1 TB SSD, 2 TB HDD, RTX 3070, Windows 11, MSFS 2020 DeLuxe, P3D 4.5
April 23, 20206 yr Same issue here with FSX3D installer for the Calvi update. First got a Kaspersky warning, then disabled it and got another warning from Windows Defender. Then installed the files and deleted the original download from SimMarket from my system. Did a quick A/V scanning and all seems fine. I also wrote a review about the Calvi scenery at SimMarket indicating the issues with the virus warnings. Cheers, Ed Cheers, Ed MSFS2020 Steam // Rig: Corsair Graphite 760T Full Tower - ASUS MBoard Maximus XII Hero Z490 - CPU Intel i9-10900K - 64GB RAM - MSI RTX2080 Super 8GB - [1xNVMe M.2 1TB + 1xNVMe M.2 2TB (Samsung)] + [1xSSD 1TB + 1xSSD 2TB (Crucial)] + [1xSSD 1TB (Samsung)] + 1 HDD Seagate 2TB + 1 HDD Seagate External 4TB - Monitor LG 29UC97C UWHD Curved - PSU Corsair RM1000x // Thrustmaster FCS & MS XBOX Controllers
April 23, 20206 yr " First got a Kaspersky warning, then disabled it and got another warning from Windows Defender." If I were you, I would save some cash on virus scanners and don't buy them anymore. "I don't need no stinking virus scanners" 😄 Location: Vleuten, The Netherlands, 17.3dme SPL 108.40 | Simulator: FS2024 System: AMD 7800X3D - Gigabyte X670 - RTX 4090 - 64GB DDR5 - 2 x 2TB SSD - 32" 1440p Display - Windows 11 Pro
April 23, 20206 yr Yes, as Wolkenschreck describes I ran into this just over 36 hours ago. The virus is not particularly dangerous it appears, its just highly annoying. After the initial clean up however your system will show as clean when it is not. Once the virus is run it places svchost.exe in the Windows root folder. Once that is active it then starts to hunt down exe files on your system and it appends itself to them. Its quite straight forward to clear the initial infection. Anti-virus software will remove svchost.exe and should be able to clean up the registry entries that will activate it. The problem is that your system is not really clean. Your legitimate exe files are now infected and will run svchost.exe in the Windows root folder once you run them. It will appear that nothing is wrong because the programs launch and run. Installers also work as intended. However of course each time an infected exe is run it places the svchost.exe back into the windows folder and the virus continues to infect. The worst issue I ran into was that it infected all my uninstaller exe files as well. That meant all the exe files that were infected I had to remove by hand. By far the worst to deal with was my Adobe products that became infected. Creative Cloud, Lightroom, Photoshop were all infected and I spent several hours removing all traces of them from my system before I could re-install them again. In many ways the virus seems easy enough to get rid of. You can simply replace an infected exe with a clean one and its gone. My experience tells me that it doesn't replicate any registry entries, it merely seems to thrive by infecting exe files. I'm no computer expert but the only way I found to rid my system of this was using real time malware protection. The free Malwarebytes Anti-Malware has real time protection and in my experience it caught svchost.exe every time it was activated and quarantined it. That way I could find which programs were infected and then re-install them. Once I re-installed with a new, clean exe the virus was gone. I also found at least in my case that the virus attacked exe's in the ProgramFiles and ProgramFiles(86) folders first. It also did so by going from top to bottom in alphabetical order. I could literally see which folder it stopped attacking (when my anti-virus kicked back in) because it was in a series of FSLabs livery uninstaller folders and I noticed the change in file size of the uninstaller exe. The virus will only be active if svchost.exe is allowed to run for any period of time in the Windows root folder. If it is intercepted and not permitted to run then there should be no issue. If it has been running though it will have started to infect other exe files. How many it infects will depend totally on how long it has been left to run. Very important to note too that of course svchost.exe is a legitimate and necessary Windows file, but only when it is in certain windows folders. The Windows root folder is not one of those places. I notified both Simmarket and the developer. Simmarket deferred all responsibility to the developer. The developer replied very angrily to me that everything is fine on his system, that its a false positive and I'm the only one out of 5000+ clients who have complained. Fair to say he doesn't see any problem.
April 23, 20206 yr I installed it before seeing the warnings, as far as I can tell no virus infection...no svchost.exe in C:\windows, no warnings on running large exe's from Program Files, no warnings from a virus scan... However I'd suggest NOT installing it for now until there is more evidence. Cheers Keith Edited April 23, 20206 yr by keithb77 ...
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