Here is an update on this issue. After many email exchanges with Adobe support (over several months), they finally helped me to remove all viruses from my computer. This included Adobe Captivate cleaning up their Captivate 8 code and removing the Swf.Exploit.CVE_2014_0564-2. And yes, it is a virus but I only was able to detect it with CamWin.
As it turns out, it's not only the text animation files but also the widget animation files. Following is the final correspondence with Adobe. I hope the links work too.
These are the fixed program files that Adobe uploaded for me to access https://www.dropbox.com/sh/cyelu2yvkc0f521/AADRYR3X0n3nM7lmIUNMQokWa?dl=0. However, do not use the "text animations folder", there was a little bug left and they sent me a replacement for the text animations here https://www.dropbox.com/sh/ymen27rrba75mc2/AABwsQjCmxdQHvkSx5Kjybo_a?dl=0
These are the steps Adobe support had me take and it worked for me.
- Download and extract the SWF Animations from the TextAnimations folder
- Take a back-up of the old animations which are located at “<Captivate Installation Dir>\Gallery\TextAnimations\” and “<Captivate Installation Dir>\Gallery\Widgets\”
- Replace the existing animations with the new ones in the same folder
- Open your Captivate project and delete all the old animations which were inserted, and then close Captivate.
- Even though the animations have been deleted, Captivate still holds them as internal resources. Hence, the following tool must be run :
- Download and extract the files in the CCFix folder(Win 32-bit or Win 64-bit)
- Place AdobeCaptivateFix.exe, CleanResources.bat and CPProjectsNSlides.dll in the Installation folder of Captivate 8.1
- Run CleanResources.bat
- Captivate opens in a special mode, where you get a file browser.
- Choose the files to be fixed and proceed. The fixed cptx files will be placed in the same location as the original. A “_fixed” suffix is added to the new cptx.
- Captivate automatically exits after this.Your file is now fixed.
- Now open the fixed project and replace all the deleted text animations with the new ones.
I scanned my computer with ClamWin again and it still found the virus. This time it was in the Captivate Cache. Maybe it was from fixing the old files. I deleted all Captivate Cache files and I no longer got a positive Swf.Exploit.CVE_2014_0564-2 found report from ClamWin. YIPPPIEEEEE!
It took almost 200 hours of effort to repair infected files. What I don't understand is how Adobe can have a virus in their Captivate program files and then make us fix the infected files manually. I have asked them to write a program to fix infected files (how hard can that be to automate the steps they gave me?). I never got a response. That seems really sad.