Builder Received: by 10.100.171.2 with SMTP id t2mr3672396ane.23.1318186359060; Sun, 09 Oct 2011 11:52:39 -0700 (PDT) X-BeenThere: ruby-ocra@googlegroups.com Received: by 10.101.149.4 with SMTP id b4ls3248473ano.3.gmail; Sun, 09 Oct 2011 11:52:37 -0700 (PDT) MIME-Version: 1.0 Received: by 10.101.179.32 with SMTP id g32mr962816anp.30.1318186357780; Sun, 09 Oct 2011 11:52:37 -0700 (PDT) Received: by u24g2000yqm.googlegroups.com with HTTP; Sun, 9 Oct 2011 11:52:37 -0700 (PDT) Date: Sun, 9 Oct 2011 11:52:37 -0700 (PDT) User-Agent: G2/1.0 X-HTTP-UserAgent: Mozilla/5.0 (Windows NT 6.1; WOW64) AppleWebKit/535.1 (KHTML, like Gecko) Chrome/14.0.835.202 Safari/535.1,gzip(gfe) Message-ID: <121f34c0-6e54-4ce1-9212-158ddc251201@u24g2000yqm.googlegroups.com> Subject: McAfee anti virus false positive From: Ext Matic To: OCRA One-Click Application Builder Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1 McAfee anti virus has falsely reported that an application I created with Ocra contains a virus. Has anybody else encountered this? It's too bad in my case, because I believe that what I've pulled off is truly cool, see: http://www.sencha.com/forum/showthread.php?150123-Windows-Desktop-App-using-Ruby-(instead-of-AIR) for details. I was hoping to continue working on this to the point where I can launch a Ruby web/app/server (anywhere from Camping to Rails) and then point the Qt/Webview "browser" at the locally served URL. Thanks in advance for any insight as to somehow avoiding this false