![]() ![]() It may be a false positive (meaning it's not actually a virus, but the anti-virus thinks it is) or it may actually be malicious.On a side note, keygens are illegal and highly dangerous. Any application that isn't signed by a reputable author and attempts to modify other application's structure's is usually classified as 'potentially malicious'. ![]() To answer your question, an anti-virus most likely detects it as a trojan because it patches other programs (assembly or registry entries). This way, if the application ends up trying to play hanky panky with your files, your anti-virus will tell you.- Jeff. Your anti-virus will probably say it's 'trojan.SOMETHING', tell me what it is.I wouldn't ever advice disabling your security, rather add an exception if you think the file is safe. ![]()
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