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The page has the SHA-256 hash for verifying the file. If you run it before installing MikTex, you'll get a warning with a link for installing it or a similar product so you can save your pages to PDF. Then I launched the program, it loaded fine. I ran the installer on a test machine and it ran fine. I don't think anyone's going to corrupt the same file on both sourceforge and github. page has a link for the SHA-256 checksums for WinMerge. I ran WinMerge (an open-source freeware file comparison utility) to verify that the file contents were identical. Is there a chance that the installer file is getting corrupt while downloading? Or are these just false warnings that I can overlook? I got similar warnings when I installed Frizing. The only way to install now is to switch off the antivirus completely during the installation process, and then setting it to exclude the MikTex folder.Ĭan anyone confirm these are false warnings? I know that QuickHeal isn't a very good antivirus, but my father isn't ready to discard it before the license expires.
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When I started installing MikTex, while the installation was half-way through, QuickHeal said that there was a ransomware in MikTex files, and stopped the installation. I couldn't find any evidence online of something similar happening with others, so I set the antivirus to exclude the installer, and could successfully install TexStudio. When I started installing TexStudio, QuickHeal said that the installer file was a potential keylogger, and put it into quarantine. The pc has a legal version of QuickHeal Internet Security antivirus. I decided to set up #\LaTeX# in my PC, windows 7, 32 bit.
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