Did you just stumble upon a download or a file on your computer that has been digitally signed by Oracle America, Inc.? If so, please read on.
You will typically see Oracle America, Inc. when double-clicking to run the file. The publisher name shows up as the "Verified publisher" in the UAC dialog as the screenshot shows:
You can view the digital signature details for Oracle America, Inc. with the following steps:
Here is a screencap of a file signed by Oracle America, Inc.:
As you can see in the screencap above, Windows reports that "This digital signature is OK". This means that the file has been published by Oracle America, Inc. and that the file has not been tampered with.
If you click the View Certificate button shown in the screenshot above, you can view all the details of the certificate, such as when it was issued, who issued the certificate, how long it is valid, and so on. You can also examine the address for Oracle America, Inc., such as the street name, city and country.
VeriSign Class 3 Code Signing 2009-2 CA, Symantec Class 3 SHA256 Code Signing CA, VeriSign Class 3 Code Signing 2010 CA and DigiCert SHA2 Assured ID Code Signing CA has issued the Oracle America, Inc. certificates. You can also view the details of the issuer by clicking the View Certificate button shown in the screenshot above.
These are the Oracle America, Inc. files I've gathered, thanks to the FreeFixer users.
The FreeFixer tool treats files from Oracle America, Inc. as safe, which means that the Oracle America, Inc. files will appear with a green background and that there is no removal checkbox for the file. However, as you can see in the scan results below, a few of the anti-virus scanners detects the Oracle America, Inc. file(s). I'm pretty sure those detections are false positives and that the files are safe. It is unlikely that Oracle America, Inc. would ship a malware file.
Detection Ratio | File Name |
---|---|
1/49 | jxpiinstall.exe |
1/56 | jusched.exe |
1/55 | JavaSetup7u67.com |
1/66 | JavaSetup8u161.exe |
1/69 | jp2ssv.dll |
1/53 | jusched.exe |
1/54 | jusched.exe |
1/68 | jusched.exe |
1/64 | JavaSetup8u144 (1).exe |
1/53 | unpack200.exe |
1/55 | jucheck.exe |
1/55 | jusched.exe |
1/56 | jusched.exe |
1/40 | jxpiinstall.exe |
1/55 | javaws.exe |
1/68 | jre-8u161-windows-au.exe |
1/70 | jucheck.exe |
1/69 | jusched.exe |
1/47 | javaws.exe |
1/44 | java.exe |
1/56 | jusched.exe |
1/68 | javaw.exe |
1/71 | jusched.exe |
1/72 | jusched.exe |
0/57 | ss%USERNAME%.dll |
0/52 | ssv.dll |
0/47 | ssv.dll |
0/48 | ssv.dll |
0/57 | jp2ssv.dll |
0/54 | ssv.dll |
0/47 | ssv.dll |
0/46 | ssv.dll |
0/52 | 15d42eb.rbf |
0/49 | jp2ssv.dll |
Here is the detection names for the Oracle America, Inc. files. I've grouped the detection names by each scanner engine. Thanks to VirusTotal for the scan results.
As mentioned above, I think these detections are incorrect since it is very unlikely that Oracle America, Inc. would ship a malware file.
Scanner | Detection Names |
---|---|
APEX | Malicious |
Antiy-AVL | Trojan/Win32.SGeneric, Trojan/Win32.Rozena, Trojan/Generic.ASMalwS.3398A9C, Backdoor/Win32.Rbot, GrayWare[AdWare]/Win32.FileFinder.h |
Baidu | Win32.Trojan.WisdomEyes.16070401.9500.9996, Win32.Trojan.WisdomEyes.16070401.9500.9993 |
Bkav | W32.eHeur.Downloader |
ClamAV | Win.Virus.Sality-6826930-0, Win.Worm.Chir-2442, Win.Malware.Agent1012317919/CRDF-1 |
Cylance | Unsafe |
F-Prot | W32/S-5a177339!Eldorado |
Rising | Malware.Generic!lyAlb9Izl1O@5 (thunder) |
TheHacker | Trojan/Agent.bpwf |
Yandex | Trojan.Agent!Th1BlafBgMw, Backdoor.SpyGate! |
Zillya | Trojan.Bladabindi.Win32.62043 |
The detection percentage is based on that I've gathered 51111 scan reports for the Oracle America, Inc. files. 24 of these scan reports came up with some sort of detection. You can view the full details of the scan reports by examining the files listed above.
The analysis is based on certificates with the following serial numbers: