Am I the only one getting a virus alert from the "arkenstoned.exe" file?
Bitdefender antivirus flags it, and automatically deletes it. Not sure what to make of it.
I get the same thing too. Avast says it's infected with Win32:Malware-gen. It just deletes the infected "arkenstoned.exe" file, and the wallet seems to run fine without it.
http://www.im-infected.com/trojan/win32malware-gen.htmlAnyone have any suggestions as to whether or not it's worthwhile to mine a coin who's developers added a virus into the package? I know just like University Coin this is one I won't touch.

No virus into the package. Almost all coins have a problem with antivirus programs.
Have to disagree with you big time on that one. I've got 191 wallets installed on my computer, Arkenstone is one of only 3 I've had virus warnings for. There's no reason for a false positive. I'm not a super expert or anything like that, but I can't think of why a cryptocoin would set off a virus flag unless it's infected.
Please, check the source code and make new daemon and qt wallet. Everything will be the same.
Are you serious? Why on Earth would I ever do that? If my AV found a virus in your wallet, why on Earth would I ever want to build it myself from the source code?
You built it, put a virus in it, then disseminated it throughout the community. And when I point out there's a virus in it, you first try to excuse it as a false positive which makes no sense because for it to be a false positive you'd have for some inexplicable reason added the signature of a virus to the file........?
Then you suggest I build it myself from the source files? Are you fucking kidding me?
So I catch you spreading a virus, and you try to deflect from that by asserting the problem is on my end because I didn't build the wallet myself from the source files? You're the dev, so it's on you to disseminate a working and virus free version of the wallet. It's not the responsibility of someone who's interested in mining your coin to build the wallet themselves if they want to mine the coin without their computers being damaged.
I've almost six years experience working in collections, and I know plenty about hacking and building viruses. So I can smell your fallacious rhetoric from the onset.
The correct thing to do would have been to remove the link to the infected file, replace it with a working and non-infected version of the wallet, and to apologize to the entire community for putting their computers at risk. Instead you attempt to patronize me with nonsense and fallacious assertions.
You're fucking ridiculous.