Information about csc.exe

csc.exe

csc.exe is a Windows file recorded in the ThreatInfo database. It is associated with Microsoft® Visual Studio® 2005. The reported company name is Microsoft Corporation. The current detection status is Clean, based on the latest analysis from 2021-01-10 03:31:29 (5 years ago).

This record is currently marked as clean, but file reputation can depend on the exact path, hash, and source. Compare the MD5 and publisher data below with the file on your system.

Product Name: Microsoft® Visual Studio® 2005
Company Name: Microsoft Corporation
MD5: a17e4d4e15098270d714146821ba9706
Size: 86 KB
First Published: 2019-10-30 11:53:25 (6 years ago)
Latest Published: 2021-01-10 03:31:29 (5 years ago)
Status: Clean (on last analysis)
Analysis Date: 2021-01-10 03:31:29 (5 years ago)
Signed By: Microsoft Corporation
Status: Trusted Publisher

ThreatInfo marks this publisher as trusted for this record, but the file hash and source should still match the expected software distribution.

50.0%
50.0%

The strongest geographic signal for this file is Sweden with 50.0% 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 csc.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.

csc.exe is identified as pe for 64 systems. The subsystem is Windows CUI. PE header values are useful for triage, especially when they do not match the expected publisher, product, or release timeline.

Subsystem: Windows CUI
PE Type: pe
OS Bitness: 64
Image Base: 0x0000000000400000
Entry Address: 0x0000d810

PE Sections:

Name Size of data MD5
.text 76288 665eba5f3a0d95f172a68eef59c31d88
.data 1024 94b8c718824b6459852b8840659e2e57
.pdata 1536 aa8330069d703b33e0edea78e9609ba9
.rsrc 2048 1c3c6bfd3ec3269c42d68729cccd3169

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: