Some malware will pose as antivirus software and will report false
positives on websites.  I have seen this on a couple of machines
lately.  I'm not saying that is the issue here, but it might be worth
investigating if all other options fail.

-Mike

On Oct 13, 1:15 pm, ITW <[email protected]> wrote:
> Thanks for your advice.. i have changed GPoint to GLatLng...
> (Attention lat and lng must be twisted)
>
> But my main problem isn't solved...
> It cannot be that the ISP is the cause.
> With one client it works and another in the same private network with
> the same router (and so same ISP) i get the malware warning....
> The difference between both is the antiv-virus agent.  It works with
> Avast and Antivir makes trouble.
>
> Could be the codesize of javascript (many markers are set) inside html
> to "big" ?
> Or i have a mischance by write the code, that some lines of my
> sourcecode are equal with "malware" ?
>
> Thanks for your help...
>
> On 12 Okt., 23:04, Esa <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>
>
> > I don't see any warnings either. I second Marcelo's theory.
>
> > However I had a look at your source code. You are using GPoint()
> > instead of GLatLng() when defining coordinates. They seem to work
> > perfect now but any API version change may break your page.
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