Antivirus organisation AVG has mistakenly identified a core Windows file as a piece of malware. An AVG update, pushed out on Sunday, for versions 7.5 and 8 falsely identified user32.dll as malware.
Following on the heels of competitor Avast, security and antivirus developer AVG has announced it has filed with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission to make an initial public offering to raise ...
Yesterday, a signatures update pushed by AVG falsely labeled a critical Windows file as a banker malware, prompting the company to quickly fix the issue and issue a workaround, following end users ...
A recent update from antivirus firm AVG has caused havoc with some users by deleting a critical file in non-English versions of Windows XP after incorrectly detecting it as a virus. Many users of AVG ...
If you are an AVG user (7.5 or 8.0) you need to do an update right away. Yesterday an update that was released recognized a Windows XP system file (user.dll) as a virus and recommended deleting the ...
For small business owners, their computing devices and IT setup is at the very heart of what they do. That’s one of the most powerful developments to have come to small businesses. Recent advances in ...
Our team tests, rates, and reviews more than 1,500 products each year to help you make better buying decisions and get more from technology. AVG AntiVirus Free offers the same powerful antivirus ...
A database update from AVG over the weekend made the Windows antivirus software attack users' iTunes installations, mistakenly viewing the application's library files as a Trojan virus and placing ...
If there's one thing we've all experienced as Windows PC users, it's the inevitable degradation of our computers. After all, PCs get bogged down with junk files, registry issues, fragmented hard ...