after doing some google and chrome related research I was able to "tell" 
chrome that this is not a malware app. seems there are a lot of heuristics 
done by either chrome or google servers (eg: is your binary originated from 
a public / free location, is it digitally signed, etc)

This is what I did:

 - I do have an authenticode certificate to digitally sign windows 
binaries. I signed the executable.
 - I've uploaded it to a site on the web which is owned by me

The problem went away instantly.

On Tuesday, August 26, 2014 12:32:49 PM UTC+2, Hartmut Goebel wrote:
>
>  Am 26.08.2014 10:42, schrieb daniel szabo:
>  
> What could be the problem?
>
>
> google chrome. Seriously. Obviously it has a bad malware detection.
>
> -- 
>  Schönen Gruß 
> Hartmut Goebel 
>  Dipl.-Informatiker (univ), CISSP, CSSLP
> Information Security Management, Security Governance, Secure Software 
> Development 
>
> Goebel Consult, Landshut 
> http://www.goebel-consult.de 
>
> Blog: 
> http://www.goebel-consult.de/blog/openstreetmap-karten-in-typo3-einbinden 
> Kolumne: 
> http://www.cissp-gefluester.de/2011-09-kommerz-uber-recht-fdp-die-gefaellt-mir-partei
>  
>
> Goebel Consult ist Mitglied bei http://www.7-it.de/ 
>  

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