Safe to remove many GB of accumulating Microsoft Antimalware files?

soho1

New member
Power User
Local time
6:43 PM
Messages
458
Location
Earth, Mostly Chicago and London
My backup drive has gotten crammed full and I need to delete some old backups, but along the way, I see that some of the worst garbage accumulating is in c:\ProgramData\Microsoft Antimalware subdirectories.

Under .\Scans I see about 18 GB of files of the form mpcache-FC50A510897E3C2CD9FF30B4F4D8752A515DB662.bin.67 and the like.

There are another 10 GB of files under .\Definition Updates\

All told, this MSE pig has consumed over 15% of my disk.

Is this crapware (don't want to call it malware) that I can remove? How can I prevent it from accumulating? What is the proper procedure (e.g. services to turn off first? safe to delete the files, or entire subdirectory? will it automatically recreate as needed? etc.)

Thanks guys and gals.

PS
After 30 some years of trying to polish Windows clean, got myself a shiny new Apple today. Next I will have to dig into how Microsoft profited so well last quarter.
 

My Computer My Computer

At a glance

Win 7 Pro 64-bitIntel Core i516 GB Dell, 6 GB ToshibaIntel crap on both but Dell also has nVidia G...
Computer type
Laptop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Dell Insprion 7559 next to a Toshiba Portege
OS
Win 7 Pro 64-bit
CPU
Intel Core i5
Motherboard
Intel
Memory
16 GB Dell, 6 GB Toshiba
Graphics Card(s)
Intel crap on both but Dell also has nVidia GeForce GTX960M
Sound Card
RealTek
Monitor(s) Displays
internal and external ACER KA270H 27"
Screen Resolution
1920x1080
Hard Drives
SSD 256 GB plus numerous WD Red or Purple on USB3 docks. Used to buy a lot of Seagate but tossed them the second time I got unrecoverable disc corruption in the midst of use.
Keyboard
Garage Mouse SW and some cheap Amazon China made USB device
Mouse
Garage Mouse and some cheap Amazon China made USB device
Internet Speed
50 Mbps (allegedly, depends on server)
Antivirus
Defender, Malwarebytes Premium and Kaspersky
Browser
IE 11, and Chrome something
CCleaner (https://www.piriform.com/CCLEANER) has an option to clean MS Essentials and Windows Defender's folders automatically, you might want to check it.

Here is a link about what files exactly get deleted : Microsoft Security Essentials - CCleaner Bug Reporting - Piriform Community Forums
%CommonAppDAta% = C:\ProgramData\ in your case.

You can manually delete those if you don't want to install this application.

I'm not certain about the "Scans" and "Definition Updates" folders though. I assume deleting old definition updates is safe, but not certain.

You could try renaming them first to something like *.OLD and check if it still works. If it does than you can safely delete them for good.
 

My Computer My Computer

At a glance

Windows 8
Computer type
PC/Desktop
OS
Windows 8
Back
Top