The scanner combines signature checks, file inspection, website structure checks, and known-bad URL intelligence where available.
What does the file scanner look for?
File scans can look for:
- known malware signatures
- suspicious file type or extension mismatches
- executable payloads hidden inside archives
- archive paths that try to escape their folder
- document auto-run and shell-launch indicators
- suspicious scripts and encoded payload patterns
Encrypted, damaged, truncated, or unsupported files may return an unsupported or partial result instead of a confident verdict.
What does the website scanner look for?
Website scans can look for:
- suspicious redirects
- hidden frames or off-site embedded content
- risky script loading patterns
- credential or payment forms with suspicious destinations
- malicious downloads or linked payloads
- URLs, hosts, or hashes that match known-bad intelligence
Website scans are bounded. A report may cover the submitted page plus discovered same-site assets, not every page on a large site.
Does clean mean safe?
No. A clean verdict means the enabled checks completed without malicious or suspicious findings. It does not prove that a file or website is harmless.