Hello everyone, I like to ask people here, notably those who would know better because I ran into a bit of a situation where avast had ‘detected’ a rootkit problem when nvvscv.exe had changed drastically. Funny thing is this is when I was updating the driver (Which I am attempting solving other problems not related to this) and happened. Basically it said it was a form of malware or something like that. As you may know, Nvidia’s Geforce drivers likes to delete the driver first and then reinstall a fresher version. And Avast thinks this is a infection, it also on the side it asked me to delete the files that detected a different problem. I’m just trying to remember what happened here, so bear with me.
It first started out with the driver, via Nvidia Geforce Experience provides, uninstalling current and then reinstalling which many may know it’ll revert your resolution screen in the process until installing the updated driver to revert back to normal. Well, during the uninstallation didn’t sat well with Avast and didn’t want to cooperate and threw a warning at me regardless of permissions given positively, first the popup saying a system file or something (I dunno, I didn’t pay much attention to what it said) to cleanly delete it. Then it says it detected a rootkit virus of that file and demands to delete it or if safely, contain it for testing. I didn’t choose any options that it provided and left it alone because I assumed the anti-virus is being itself as usual. I had failed to install the first time, again reoccurring the same thing twice via windows update and then the rest by the Nvidia Geforce Experience program.
As for the long story short of this, is Avast giving nvvscv.exe a awful false positive? I doubt I can provide any files since I had already done updating or didn’t run into any other unusual or out of place problems since. Of course I forgot to mention I am using Windows 7, Geforce 760 for any more detailed information in case this helps defusing the situation. As I continue to remember, I forgot to mention when the driver failed to update the first time was when Windows 7 intervened and purposely deleted the driver so it wasn’t buggy or something. I had this happen with my mouse at one time when I made my first gaming computer. That’s when it began using Windows Update to find the essential driver to install it for me, so then I continued from there and successfully downloaded the latest driver then.