Microsoft’s fledgling consumer antivirus service, Windows Live OneCare, wrongly identified Google’s Gmail service as a virus infection last week, Microsoft has admitted.The false positive began late last week when Google made changes to the Gmail website, Microsoft claimed, but didn’t give details as to exactly what the changes were or why they had caused the problem. The result was that when OneCare users visited the Gmail site, they were informed their systems were infected with the virus BAT/BWG.A.“Windows Live OneCare customers may have recently experienced an issue that incorrectly flagged files related to Google’s Gmail service as a virus,” a Microsoft spokesperson said. “This was a limited false positive issue with our antivirus protection.”Microsoft apologized for the mistake and said it was reviewing its processes to keep similar problems from recurring. The problem began late last week and was fixed by a signature update on Sunday, Microsoft said. For some of those affected, the false positive turned into a serious headache involving lost data and hours of wasted time with Microsoft tech support, according to Gmail and Microsoft user forums.The experience of a user called Jim was typical, with several hours of telephone calls and Remote Desktop tech support. “He gave up after an hour and told me it was in my Gmail so I had to delete everything, trash, sent, archived, etc., and then use Stinger. I mistakenly followed his advice. Two years of carefully saved stuff is gone,” he wrote. “I restarted, went into my empty Gmail account with nothing in there, and a WLOC message popped up telling me of a BAT/BMG A virus.”Microsoft is not the only one to suffer from false positives, which occur regularly in antivirus programs. Earlier this year a McAfee signature update falsely identified components of Microsoft Office as a virus, and Microsoft’s antispyware software said a Symantec security program was a Trojan.-Matthew Broersma, Techworld.com (London)This article is posted on our Microsoft Informer page. For more news on the Redmond, Wash.-based powerhouse, keep checking in.Check out our CIO News Alerts and Tech Informer pages for more updated news coverage. Related content case study How IT leaders use EV tech to fuel the transport revolution in Kenya Many African nations are starting to invest in electric vehicle (EV) transportation as a means to broaden access and help keep pace with global environmental initiatives. In Kenya, strides are being made despite industry and tech leaders grappling to By Vincent Matinde May 31, 2023 5 mins CIO CTO Emerging Technology feature How CIOs distill the most sought-after data skills From back-end engineers to data scientists and line-of-business experts, here’s the in-demand talent that all organizations need to turn a glut of information into game-changing insight. By Mark Samuels May 31, 2023 8 mins IT Skills Data Center IT Leadership interview Broadcom’s Andy Nallappan on what cloud success really looks like The CTO, CSO, and head of software engineering and operations knows firsthand that a successful move to the cloud is all about changing the culture and replacing on-prem’s sunk cost mentality with incentivized FinOps. By Martha Heller May 31, 2023 8 mins Technology Industry IT Strategy Cloud Computing feature Key IT initiatives reshape the CIO agenda While cloud, cybersecurity, and analytics remain top of mind for IT leaders, a shift toward delivering business value is altering how CIOs approach key priorities, pushing transformative projects to the next phase. By Mary Pratt May 30, 2023 10 mins IT Strategy IT Leadership Podcasts Videos Resources Events SUBSCRIBE TO OUR NEWSLETTER From our editors straight to your inbox Get started by entering your email address below. Please enter a valid email address Subscribe