Information about boost-speed-setup.exe

boost-speed-setup.exe

boost-speed-setup.exe is a Windows file recorded in the ThreatInfo database. It is associated with Auslo˜gics Boos˜tSpeed . The reported company name is Auslo˜gics . The current detection status is Undefined, based on the latest analysis from 2023-12-15 23:39:15 (2 years ago).

ThreatInfo does not have a final classification for this file yet. Use the technical details below to compare the hash, size, signature, and observed locations with the copy found on your device.

Product Name: Auslo˜gics Boos˜tSpeed
Company Name: Auslo˜gics
MD5: e42f808c7b90e2f32b1551ef236e3ed4
Size: 28 MB
First Published: 2021-03-27 21:07:55 (5 years ago)
Latest Published: 2023-12-15 23:39:15 (2 years ago)
Status: Undefined (on last analysis)
Analysis Date: 2023-12-15 23:39:15 (2 years ago)
Signed By: Auslogics Labs Pty Ltd
Status: Valid

The signature on boost-speed-setup.exe is reported as valid. A valid signature helps confirm publisher identity, but it does not automatically make the file safe if the installer was bundled, abused, or downloaded from an untrusted source.

%profile%\downloads
%profile%
%profile%
%profile%

ThreatInfo has observed boost-speed-setup.exe in the locations listed above. Files found in temporary folders, user profile folders, startup locations, or unusual application directories should be reviewed more carefully than files installed under a known program directory.

75.0%
25.0%

The strongest geographic signal for this file is Italy with 75.0% of observed hits. Geographic distribution can help identify targeted campaigns, regional software bundles, or where a file is most commonly reported.

Windows 10 100.0%

The most common operating system signal for boost-speed-setup.exe is Windows 10 with 100.0% of observed hits. If your system differs from the common profile, check whether the file was introduced by a specific installer, archive, or removable device.

boost-speed-setup.exe is identified as pe for 32 systems. The subsystem is Windows GUI. PE header values are useful for triage, especially when they do not match the expected publisher, product, or release timeline.

Subsystem: Windows GUI
PE Type: pe
OS Bitness: 32
Image Base: 0x00400000
Entry Address: 0x000117dc

PE Sections:

Name Size of data MD5
.text 62464 a33e9ff7181115027d121cd377c28c8f
.itext 4096 caec456c18277b579a94c9508daf36ec
.data 3584 746954890499546d73dce0e994642192
.bss 0 d41d8cd98f00b204e9800998ecf8427e
.idata 4096 e9b9c0328fd9628ad4d6ab8283dcb20e
.tls 0 d41d8cd98f00b204e9800998ecf8427e
.rdata 512 3dffc444ccc131c9dcee18db49ee6403
.rsrc 430080 844053b4e01f4424e909fdc628010fb4

PE section names and hashes can reveal packing, injected resources, or unusual build artifacts. Sections with uncommon names, very large raw data, or hashes that differ from a trusted copy deserve additional review.

More information: