Spletno mesto bo delovalo z omejenimi zmožnostmi, medtem ko na njem izvajamo vzdrževalna dela za vas. Če članki ne rešijo vaše težave in želite zastaviti vprašanje, naša skupnost za podporo čaka na vas na @FirefoxSupport na Twitterju in na /r/firefox na Redditu.

Iskanje po podpori

Izogibajte se prevarantski tehnični podpori. Nikoli vam ne bomo naročili, da pokličete telefonsko številko ali nam pošljete osebne podatke. Sumljivo dejavnost prijavite z gumbom »Prijavi zlorabo«.

Več o tem

webroot antivirus quarantined the ssl3.dll file, now Firefox won't run. How can I fix it?

more options

I updated to the new firefox 8. It worked fine until webroot ran a virus scan. It quarantined the ssl3.dll file as a medium risk threat. Is it safe for me to un-quarantine, or is it a malicious file?

I updated to the new firefox 8. It worked fine until webroot ran a virus scan. It quarantined the ssl3.dll file as a medium risk threat. Is it safe for me to un-quarantine, or is it a malicious file?

Izbrana rešitev

Hi Codgerette,

This is Greg from Webroot Support responding to your post.

I checked your Support ticket and it appears that the reason the file was quarantined was due to a false positive detection which has been resolved. I can assure you that Webroot products are thoroughly tested with other software packages to insure compatibility. Occasionally some applications that receive incremental updates may initially get flagged due to the behavioral detection technique in SecureAnywhere. Unlike traditional security software, Webroot SecureAnywhere relies on a cloud database to check files, so as soon as this file was deemed safe, all customers who have Webroot SecureAnywhere installed will not have this file quarantined and the installation should go smoothly.

Thanks,

Greg

Greg Davis

Webroot Support Team http://www.webroot.com/En_US/index.html

Preberite ta odgovor v kontekstu 👍 0

Vsi odgovori (3)

more options

See if you can make Webroot restore that file in the Firefox program folder (C:\Program Files\Mozilla Firefox\).
If not then you need to reinstall Firefox and make sure that Webroot doesn't do that another time.

You can find the latest Firefox release here:

more options

Here is the paltry, response I got from Webroot that made me think of a young fella who emitted too soon: RE:Your broke Firefox!!!Hello,

I apologize for this issue and we will work diligently to resolve this. Please reply to this message from the computer that this occurred on.

Doing this will supply two small files regarding recent scan history that will help us determine what has happened.

Thank you,

Webroot Support Team

I just plan to reinstall the file they stopped and worry about Firefox now....

more options

Izbrana rešitev

Hi Codgerette,

This is Greg from Webroot Support responding to your post.

I checked your Support ticket and it appears that the reason the file was quarantined was due to a false positive detection which has been resolved. I can assure you that Webroot products are thoroughly tested with other software packages to insure compatibility. Occasionally some applications that receive incremental updates may initially get flagged due to the behavioral detection technique in SecureAnywhere. Unlike traditional security software, Webroot SecureAnywhere relies on a cloud database to check files, so as soon as this file was deemed safe, all customers who have Webroot SecureAnywhere installed will not have this file quarantined and the installation should go smoothly.

Thanks,

Greg

Greg Davis

Webroot Support Team http://www.webroot.com/En_US/index.html