Mozilla 도움말 검색

고객 지원 사기를 피하세요. 저희는 여러분께 절대로 전화를 걸거나 문자를 보내거나 개인 정보를 공유하도록 요청하지 않습니다. "악용 사례 신고"옵션을 사용하여 의심스러운 활동을 신고해 주세요.

Learn More

I just downloaded Firefox with a refresh. Norton advised me that the download of gmpopenh264.dll is safe. Google search says remove, it's a virus. Please advise

  • 3 답장
  • 1 이 문제를 만남
  • 163 보기
  • 최종 답변자: James

more options

Hello, my refreshed copy of Firefox I just downloaded is working just fine. However, my Norton anti-virus notified me just now that 2 downloads of gmpopenh264.dll were safe, but I did a Google search on that data library and there are numerous different postings on blogs advising to delete it due to it being a virus or is infected with a virus. Will someone with Mozilla please advise on what it is and if there have been problems...I downloaded my copy of Firefox directly from the Mozilla.org website. Thanks

Hello, my refreshed copy of Firefox I just downloaded is working just fine. However, my Norton anti-virus notified me just now that 2 downloads of gmpopenh264.dll were safe, but I did a Google search on that data library and there are numerous different postings on blogs advising to delete it due to it being a virus or is infected with a virus. Will someone with Mozilla please advise on what it is and if there have been problems...I downloaded my copy of Firefox directly from the Mozilla.org website. Thanks

선택된 해결법

Hello ryfumo,

Totally understandable that you are confused by all those mixed Google search results .....

But it is the OpenH264 plugin, which is part of Firefox to provide full compatibility with WebRTC.

Also see : https://support.mozilla.org/en-US/kb/open-h264-plugin-firefox

문맥에 따라 이 답변을 읽어주세요 👍 2

모든 댓글 (3)

more options

선택된 해결법

Hello ryfumo,

Totally understandable that you are confused by all those mixed Google search results .....

But it is the OpenH264 plugin, which is part of Firefox to provide full compatibility with WebRTC.

Also see : https://support.mozilla.org/en-US/kb/open-h264-plugin-firefox

more options

Many 'bad' programs use the names of good programs to try to get in the computer

more options

FredMcD said

Many 'bad' programs use the names of good programs to try to get in the computer

Norton has been known to do false positives with Firefox, Thunderbird, and SeaMonkey related files over the years though.