Those are false positives. What you need to do is ask ARTEMIS for your money back. There’s really the only solution.
The problem is this: Any 3rd party selling anti-virus software needs viruses to exist and they need you to believe you get occasionally infected with them for that party to be in business. During the dot com bubble, there were online scanners that would report false positives so you’d buy their product. Today, it remains a low risk for a 3rd party to report false positives as long as they don’t do it on extremely popular software. QSPICE is new, so a 3rd party can tell you it’s infected and have you not use it. The perception can be that the virus company saved your day, where the opposite is the fact.
People love to hate Microsoft, but only the Microsoft virus product has a business model that is in your interest. Microsoft(and yourself) are the only parties that don’t want viruses on your computer. 3rd parties all want viruses to exist and occasionally infect your computer. 3rd party virus companies are not your friend.
Two final thoughts (i) There is absolutely no excuse for detecting acmesemi.dll as infected. It is digitally signed with an extended verification authority at the highest level of security and has a SHA256 digest. The C++ source code top acmesemi.dll is even included. (ii) QSPICE is developed on a secure platform in a very secure location whereas virus companies need to have all those viruses to be able to detect them and can’t afford as secure of location as I work in.
–Mike