![]() ![]() If you would like to get more information, please use search form. This post was from a user who has deleted their account.We have found 10 and more reports related to this query.īelow you can find few information about those threats. Please check this Knowledge Base page for more information. You may opt to simply delete the quarantined files. If the detected files have already been cleaned, deleted, or quarantined by your Trend Micro product, no further step is required. ![]() This post was from a user who has deleted their account. Scan your computer with your Trend Micro product to clean files detected as HTMLFRAMER.WER. I think the supply issues are from Vasco's side, not Blizzard's. It's also also worth mentioning that they're back in stock in the Blizzard store. It's worth mentioning that they do at least limit purchase to no more than 6 in a single month. Apparently they don't have the sense (or resources? lol?) to realize that some people (unlike myself) just want an authenticator to (*gasp*) secure their account, and don't actually give a damn to wait a few weeks just to be able to order one with Kerrigan's butt on it or something. It's not my fault they don't have the sense to always keep a default design in-stock rather than ordering a seemingly limited stock of special designed ones. Hey, Blizzard isn't dumb - they know exactly what they're doing by making 'collectible' designs. maybe you should just stick with the one, so people who actually need them for their account and not for lulz can buy them. "thinking about collecting all of the different authenticator designs" Increase in Hacked Accounts: Cause for Concern?Īlso, Blizzard authenticators are awesome (oh, and in before "my friend has an authenticator and still got hacked!") - play it safe, guys.As a recent victim of having my debit card number stolen, I'm pretty paranoid right now and do implore you guys to be extremely cautious with all of the precious details of your life - not just your World of Warcraft account! But don't worry, your purples (and monies) are safe with us - you can check out our Google SafeBrowsing page, and also view some of our previous informative Wowhead blog articles on internet security: I want to remind everyone that, of course, we take these sort of reports extremely seriously and we are 100% committed to providing a safe and clean browsing experience for all Wowhead users. If you are still experiencing an issue, please update manually by clicking on the AVG icon in the system tray. ![]() The Virus Lab team pushed out an update to hopefully resolve the issue at 4am (European Time). Hi everyone, firstly apologies for the the HTML/Framer issue that you have been experiencing. Update! AVG has posted the following comment on their Facebook: ![]() While I definitely don't want to advise disabling any sort of virus scanning software, if you are experiencing constant notifications like those reported by the users on AVG's forum, it may be safe to give AVG Active Surf-Shield a rest for the next 24 hours or so while things get cleared up on their end. We will, of course, continue to monitor this issue and as I am not personally experiencing these notifications, I'm not sure whether or not AVG has quietly cleared things up on their end or not. Update! This has been confirmed false positive report - see quote directly from AVG below! Naturally, this is reason for great concern! Upon further research (and with loads of great information from the awesome users who reported it) I learned that the AVG Active Surf-Shield tool has been erroneously reporting an "active threat" found in Google's reCAPTCHA (specifically, the recaptcha_ajax.js file), claiming it as a HTML/Framer Virus.Ī little more Google tango produced this thread on AVG's forums, in which many users are reporting the AVG Surf-Shield as claiming this threat on multiple major websites (such as Yahoo! Mail or ), citing seemingly random sources of this alleged "infection." While there has been no official statement from AVG at this time, I do believe we can safely say that what we have on our hands here is a false positive - in this case, the AVG virus scan client is erroneously reporting harmless files as potential threats. I received a number of emails this evening raising concern about a potential virus infection on our site. ![]()
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