![]() ![]() Personally, I wouldn't bet on it myself without doing more work at the professional level to see. Perhaps it is absolutely n as Kappy has indicated. The fact that it detects the file as corrupt, well perhaps it is just a corrupt file. When it is absolutely a known malware signature it will tell you that also. Kappy may be correct that Sophos is giving you a "false positive", Sophos is just a tool that warns when something is questionable. So that by itself should not be a concern. It is normal for temporary files to exist in the directory in the way that the files you have noted exist. If you are a terminal user then you can check that these files disappear on reboot. ![]() ![]() Those files will very likely disappear on restart. If you have other system behaviors that are making you worry or wonder, the quickest and totally safe thing to do is restart your computer. ![]()
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