Files signed by Microsoft 3rd Party Application Component;Microsoft Corporation

Microsoft 3rd Party Application Component;Microsoft Corporation

Microsoft 3rd Party Application Component;Microsoft Corporation is a digital signature publisher name observed in ThreatInfo records. This page groups 19 signed files and shows whether those files are currently classified as clean, undefined, or detected.

A digital signature can help identify a publisher, but it does not always prove that a file is safe. Certificates may be abused, stolen, expired, or attached to modified installers, so the file hash and detection status should be checked together.

update.exe 5fcc35b0b30de0823e6faf396d310752 Under review
Squirrel.exe 0a82f549a4b585be2d93472cdbfffc48 Possible Threat
update.exe 4b98c6758cab54938391f3b3ecbb8768 Possible Threat
update.exe 6f4893f0ff0fb87d8a2fe0be84f13367 Possible Threat
update.exe 50d235d417334826bad30b536e6e8544 Possible Threat
Squirrel.exe 93e3e4c0d3813dc1dbbdf89362c573e1 Under review
libGLESv2.dll 7ac0d976c72ce4ff56a2796d808b9548 Under review
Squirrel.exe befaf86b2f8ca76b5b40ec8f1ee508cb Suspicious Object
keytar.node ee434b9d8cfd148524bd9fc04218fa98 Under review
spellchecker.node dae338d828a30b133afe71497ae347f1 Under review
libGLESv2.dll 391104d9d4c4016275237ab990bad2d5 Under review
ffmpeg.dll 885b4a4fad05d4e1fa27db9373f10f43 Under review
libEGL.dll 9bb5377cfeee89d48df8ea6481aa51b8 Under review
keyboard-layout-manager.node 0b4a6aa08a7d504a1a834a1d76f1613b Under review
libEGL.dll f8ad261aba6038b9cb73d463295b30bc Under review
Squirrel.exe 9de1230a807cb773e08ba55d74cc8b92 Under review
update.exe 36c7f3cda56eb5a836c24a34d2d44725 Possible Threat
libGLESv2.dll 6d5ef31eccf0dca0f6caa2b71d4870c6 Under review
libEGL.dll 3b0f5301c11e48e2c527f3f57779e2c6 Under review

Certificate review summary

Use the file hashes to verify this signature

ThreatInfo groups the signed files above so you can compare exact hashes and detection labels. A signature name alone is not enough to decide whether a file is safe.

Recommended checks

  • Open any matching file report and compare the MD5 hash.
  • Confirm the file path and download source before trusting the binary.
  • Run a GridinSoft scan if the signed file appears unexpectedly.