

The antivirus companies are all in a big rush to show they detect eleventy bajillion more things than the other guy, so several have categories for anything even remotely bad, like keygens and cracks. Fast forward a couple years and Google eventually indexed his webserver because it was open and someone mentioned it over IRC or something, and then the antivirus engines looked at it, and that's where things went sideways. This wasn't piracy, because these were for a couple of long out-of-support products running on hardware you'd be shocked to still see people using (who definitely had the licences but good luck keeping paperwork in order at a rural public school) but he still had to support these museum pieces.
HOW TO GET TINYTASK CRACK
Each antivirus company cares about making the number of detections they can show on their website larger than everyone elses, and that's it.Ī few years back a friend of mine put a keygen (from Adobe, no less) and a crack (which was a fix for some incompatibilty I forget) up on his non-SEOd "I don't care" web server so he could more easily get at the files while at work, because he needed them for work. You're going to have to start threatening to sue people, because that system is more than a little bit incestuous and definitely does not care. Google bought the company that runs VirusTotal in 2014, but they definitely did not build that monstrosity.Īlso, expecting problems of that nature to get wrapped up in just a week is well. Trying to correct it by just calling out Google will get you nowhere. It also looks like that's where all this nonsense is coming from. The antivirus industry has for a /very/ long time been a hotbed of stupidity.
