It appears that one of the fonts, Quinze, was generating the false positives.
Mike and/or Laurie, if you could check to see if the site doesn't alarm on your machines, I'd appreciate it and pass that on to the site author.
http://app.programmingfonts.org/
On Wed, Jan 20, 2016 at 8:42 AM, Ted Roche tedroche@gmail.com wrote:
I've walked through the code on the site, and it looks okay to me (as much as you can guess a minimized jQuery files looks "okay"), Site owner Koen Lageveen tells me he's heard reports of web fonts being reported as malware before.
If your software provided any details on what the threat consisted of, I'll be glad to forward your info.
On Wed, Jan 20, 2016 at 6:06 AM, Ted Roche tedroche@gmail.com wrote:
Well, isn't that special.
https://sitecheck.sucuri.net/results/app.programmingfonts.org/ reports no problems.
I have most ads blocked in my hosts file, so if it's in there I'm not seeing it.
Do your alarms provide any more details?I'd report them to webmaster.
On Wed, Jan 20, 2016 at 3:30 AM, Laurie Alvey trukker41@gmail.com wrote:
McAfee did the same.
On 19 January 2016 at 16:51, mbsoftwaresolutions@mbsoftwaresolutions.com wrote:
That's weird. Went to the site and Avast immediately shouted "threat has been detected!" ?!??
On 2016-01-18 10:49, Ted Roche wrote:
A cute little site for playing around with color themes and console fonts.
The O'Reilly newsletters says, "Like a new pair of shoes!"
http://app.programmingfonts.org/
I spend a lot of time in Linux consoles and vim, and really appreciate Solarized Dark and SourceCodePro, though I see a couple others worth checking out.
Note that you can type in the simulated console, which is important if you're checking out key characters like zero.
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