Here is a windows binary built from the source. No mods made. Just a build. Can confirm it works on my gtx 970 nothing else. As for hashrate it seemed a little lower than spmod3 but I was at i 16.
Here you go.
I uploaded to a few places
ufileio/haxxr
nofileio/f/yLsTJy3dL9a/ccminer.exe
cheers
Maybe? a tip? But not needed or necesary! Tip the dev better.
B8zNWAJiQ5AEVdLZJDZfiQ2WDxYy72w1RG
And here is the 64 bit release.
nofile
io/f/s49HoBZTqW0/ccminer.exe
Fu*k,
I seen ppl reporting this one having a Trojan and i downloaded and tried this version on 3 of my rigs.
Any idea how to clean my pc properly now in case it was infected? :/
Dynamite it !!
Nahh im srs. I mean, ok, i deleted the files, but what if trojan horse got somewhere after i ran the app?
Should avira be enough?
Only surefire way is to wipe the machine completely and reinstall everything from the OS on up. Be sure to do a full reformat of the SDD/HDD as well before reinstalling.
The file may also have contained a worm that spread to other systems on your network, so you may want to check any other computers you may own over thoroughly as well.
As was suggested earlier, if you have wallets on any of those systems you may want to consider transferring the balances to a secure wallet first and just hope the Trojan is not lying in wait for you to unlock your wallet before front running you. Wipe those systems as well afterwards and reinstall everything fresh.
Are these steps a lot of work? Yes, but what do you expect when you download a .exe from some random guy on the Internet and then run it?
True, altough BitPorium is a Hero Member and seemed legit after short investigation. If he just compiled, dunno how trojan/virus appeared?
I'll do that.
Yeah, I did not necessarily mean to disparage BitPorium in my post, but the point is we are all essentially strangers to one another. Even going by rank or trust is still trusting an unknown person as accounts can be sold so you cannot even know for certain if the person is the same one who started the account.
Also, if you read through the later comments, even BitPorium himself was uncertain and recommended to not use that version any longer.
Myself, I think it may have indeed been a false positive as many antivirus vendors adopt a better safe than sorry attitude when it comes to mining software and will aggressively flag any miner as probably 95%+ of their customers do not run miners.
But anyway, the poster I was replying to indicated he was fearful of a Trojan and asked how he could be sure he completely removed it. My response was to address that concern specifically and the only way to be sure is to do a complete wipe and reinstall from known clean source material.