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Standard User Banger
(legend) Tue 12-May-26 20:59:33
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OneDrivePatcher.exe


[link to this post]
 
Just remoted into my Laptop which is in the other room and when the login completed I was presented with a Windows dialog (signing authorisation) and a blank background. It said do you want to run Onedrivepatcher.exe which I thought was strange as I havent used the laptop in a couple of weeks.

Searching the web reveals it is a sophisticated malware file although what it does is unclear. I presume it encrypts onedrive files for ransom.

So not taking any chances - in the process of resetting the laptop from the cloud and when thats done updating.

Thoughts?

Found the file in the Onedrive folder under my username OnedrivePatcher.exe it is digitally signed my Microsoft on the 15 April 2026 so could it be legit? Searches say no.

Tim
PlusNet, freenetname & AAISP
Asus RT-AC68U in Mesh Fibre
Speed Test

BQM

Edited by Banger (Tue 12-May-26 21:14:07)

Administrator seb
(founder) Tue 12-May-26 21:46:39
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Re: OneDrivePatcher.exe


[re: Banger] [link to this post]
 
In reply to a post by Banger:
Just remoted into my Laptop which is in the other room and when the login completed I was presented with a Windows dialog (signing authorisation) and a blank background. It said do you want to run Onedrivepatcher.exe which I thought was strange as I havent used the laptop in a couple of weeks.

Searching the web reveals it is a sophisticated malware file although what it does is unclear. I presume it encrypts onedrive files for ransom.

So not taking any chances - in the process of resetting the laptop from the cloud and when thats done updating.

Thoughts?

Found the file in the Onedrive folder under my username OnedrivePatcher.exe it is digitally signed my Microsoft on the 15 April 2026 so could it be legit? Searches say no.


SIarted looking at this and asked ChatGPT.. I'll pastew what it said as it's useful advice:

OneDrivePatcher.exe is a real Microsoft OneDrive component used during OneDrive updates/patching.

But here’s the important bit:

* A legitimate OneDrivePatcher.exe normally lives somewhere like:
* C:\Program Files\Microsoft OneDrive\
* or inside the user profile OneDrive update folders.
* It should be digitally signed by Microsoft.

However, malware authors have started abusing it because:

* it’s Microsoft-signed,
* Windows tends to trust it,
* attackers can pair it with malicious DLLs for DLL hijacking.

So the filename alone means nothing. What matters is:

* file path,
* digital signature,
* what launched it.

Quick checks:

1. Right click → Properties → Digital Signatures
* should say Microsoft Corporation.
2. Check location.
3. Upload the file to:
* VirusTotal
4. If it randomly asked for admin access while you weren’t updating OneDrive, that’s suspicious.

If you want, paste:

* the full file path,
* or a screenshot of Properties → Details / Digital Signatures,
and I’ll tell you whether it looks legit or sketchy.



seb

Sebastien Lahtinen
[email protected]

The author of the above post is a thinkbroadband staff member. It may not constitute an official statement on behalf of thinkbroadband.
Standard User Banger
(legend) Tue 12-May-26 21:52:18
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Re: OneDrivePatcher.exe


[re: seb] [link to this post]
 
I am in the process of resetting my machine I shall see if it remains after the reset. It was digitally signed by Microsoft. It was in my User local folder.

Tim
PlusNet, freenetname & AAISP
Asus RT-AC68U in Mesh Fibre
Speed Test

BQM


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Administrator seb
(founder) Tue 12-May-26 21:56:04
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Re: OneDrivePatcher.exe


[re: Banger] [link to this post]
 
In reply to a post by Banger:
I am in the process of resetting my machine I shall see if it remains after the reset. It was digitally signed by Microsoft. It was in my User local folder.


You can't really rely on anything after reset as it could be a different file. So you can't work it out now unless you have a checksum

Sebastien Lahtinen
[email protected]

The author of the above post is a thinkbroadband staff member. It may not constitute an official statement on behalf of thinkbroadband.
Standard User Banger
(legend) Tue 12-May-26 22:23:40
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Re: OneDrivePatcher.exe


[re: seb] [link to this post]
 
Well it's still there in the same folder after reset and have looked it up on VirusTotal from a link on the Eleven Forum where I opened a thread about it there. VirusTotal says its clean and legit and the sha256 matches so false alarm.

Tim
PlusNet, freenetname & AAISP
Asus RT-AC68U in Mesh Fibre
Speed Test

BQM
Administrator seb
(founder) Tue 12-May-26 22:33:04
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Re: OneDrivePatcher.exe


[re: Banger] [link to this post]
 
In reply to a post by Banger:
Well it's still there in the same folder after reset and have looked it up on VirusTotal from a link on the Eleven Forum where I opened a thread about it there. VirusTotal says its clean and legit and the sha256 matches so false alarm.


Ah cool... I have to admit the name sounds suspicious.

Sebastien Lahtinen
[email protected]

The author of the above post is a thinkbroadband staff member. It may not constitute an official statement on behalf of thinkbroadband.
Standard User Banger
(legend) Tue 12-May-26 22:35:06
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Re: OneDrivePatcher.exe


[re: seb] [link to this post]
 
What initially made me suspicious was asking for admin rights on its own. Still dont know what triggered it.

https://www.virustotal.com/gui/file/12a06caf41711a04...

Tim
PlusNet, freenetname & AAISP
Asus RT-AC68U in Mesh Fibre
Speed Test

BQM

Edited by Banger (Tue 12-May-26 22:36:35)

Standard User Taras
(eat-sleep-adslguide) Thu 14-May-26 08:57:59
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Re: OneDrivePatcher.exe


[re: Banger] [link to this post]
 
In reply to a post by Banger:
Well it's still there in the same folder after reset and have looked it up on VirusTotal from a link on the Eleven Forum where I opened a thread about it there. VirusTotal says its clean and legit and the sha256 matches so false alarm.


Hash checks are the only way to know if its the same file as the original.
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