system
1
The PAV.SIG is a PC Pitstop file. You can find more info at pcpitstop.com. Norton will say it’s a virus. Apparently, so does Avast.
system
3
Sorry - I should have explained that, yes, it is a false alarm. The PC Pitstop file (PAV.SIG) is needed to be able to run some of the site’s tests. It’s not a virus.
Mac
4
you can submit the file to avast and mabye they can fix the false alarm in the next update
system
5
No, we will not fix this. It is clearly Panda’s fault and not only ours problem - the Virus Bulletin had an article about this last autumn as well (many products detect Panda’s files!). They clearly fell to do the rule number one in their product - that the strings have to be encrypted in AV products. The problem is that if we remove one false alarm, there will be another and so on 
Pavel
igor0
6
There’s a new item in the FAQ - I would suggest to check it.
system
7
I mentioned the Virus Bulletin article discussing this problem. You can find it online here - on the page 17…
Pavel
Mac
8
oops sorry pavel and igor! I thought it looked like a panda file.
but welshrose says it is a PCPitstop file.
system
9
PcPitstop imho use Panda-AV engine/sigs for their onlinescan
Mac
10
well there now is something I didnt know 
I never use PC Pitstop as there is no mac version