Hi @androidandreas,
What is the precise message you’re seeing and in relation to which of the filenames? Is it just from site scans or also when attempting to upload or view the file in a browser? I followed the link and saw the carousel of images, so I will note that PDF or image files can easily match malicious PHP code patterns such as <? when viewed as text, causing a false-positive, so could be ignored directly from the scan results page in Wordfence if you uploaded the file yourself and you know it’s not malicious.
Thanks,
Peter.
Thread Starter
andyandy
(@androidandreas)
Hi Peter
Thanks for your reply.
The error message is simply:
“Critical Problems:
* File appears to be malicious or unsafe”.
The full filebane is as follows:
wp-content/boost-cache/cache/[myname].com/east-kent-mercury-cricket-world-cup/68e7bda3bf0540bbcb4eaed73e14e98a.html.rebuild.html
Yes I did upload it myself. Do you think it is defiitely false positive? Ia m pretty sure it is not malicious.
n.b As you can see I have anonymised my name in this link but it is of course in the post link in the original post.
Hi @androidandreas,
I do believe it is a false-positive based on what you’ve said and you recognize the file yourself.
Some customers choose to exclude cached versions of their pages entirely from scans for reasons such as this, or just for generally speeding up a Wordfence scan. In Wordfence > All Options > Scan Options > Advanced Scan Options > Exclude files from scan that match these wildcard patterns you could add wp-content/boost-cache/cache/* or wp-content/boost-cache/* depending on whether any detected files are outside of the “cache” folder.
Thanks again,
Peter.