Did you just find a download or a file on your computer that is digitally signed by Solution Real? Some of the security products refers to the detected files as Adware.SwiftBrowse.CH and Trojan.Win32.Generic!BT. The detection rate for the Solution Real files collected here is 42%. Please read on for more details.
You will probably notice Solution Real when clicking to run the file. The publisher name is displayed as the "Verified publisher" in the UAC dialog as the screenshot shows:

You can view additional details from the Solution Real certificate with the following procedure:
Here is a screenshot of a file signed by Solution Real:

As you can see in the screenshot above, Windows states that "This digital signature is OK". This implies that the file has been published by Solution Real and that the file has not been tampered with.
If you click the View Certificate button shown in the screencap above, you can see all the details of the certificate, such as when it was issued, who issued the certificate, how long it is valid, and so on. You can also view the address for Solution Real, such as the street name, city and country.
VeriSign Class 3 Code Signing 2010 CA has issued the Solution Real certificates. You can also view the details of the issuer by clicking the View Certificate button shown in the screenshot above.
The following are the Solution Real files I have gathered, thanks to the FreeFixer users.
Here's the detection names for the Solution Real files. I've grouped the detection names by each scanner engine. Thanks to VirusTotal for the scan results.
| Scanner | Detection Names |
|---|---|
| ALYac | Adware.SwiftBrowse.CH, Adware.BrowseFox.AQ, Adware.BrowseFox.V |
| AVG | Generic.D51, BrowseFox.F |
| AVware | Trojan.Win32.Generic!BT |
| Ad-Aware | Adware.SwiftBrowse.CH, Adware.BrowseFox.AQ, Adware.BrowseFox.V |
| Agnitum | Riskware.Agent!, PUA.BrowseFox! |
| AhnLab-V3 | PUP/Win32.SwiftBrowse |
| Antiy-AVL | GrayWare[NetTool:not-a-virus]/Win64.NetFilter.a, GrayWare[AdWare:not-a-virus,HEUR]/Win32.Kranet |
| Avast | Win32:BrowseFox-EC [PUP] |
| Avira | ADWARE/BrowseFox.Gen7, Adware/BrowseFox.zeq, Adware/BrowseFox.A.1227, ADWARE/BrowseFox.Gen2 |
| Baidu-International | Adware.MSIL.BrowseFox.bH, Adware.Win64.BrowseFox.BCG, Adware.Win32.BrowseFox.BO, Adware.Win64.BrowseFox.CG, Adware.Win32.BrowseFox.bJ, Adware.Win32.BrowseFox.bO |
| BitDefender | Adware.SwiftBrowse.CH, Adware.BrowseFox.AQ, Adware.BrowseFox.V |
| ClamAV | Win.Adware.Swiftbrowse-497, Win.Adware.Browsefox-202, Win.Adware.Swiftbrowse-717, Win.Adware.Netfilter-134 |
| Comodo | Application.Win32.BrowseFox.JM, Application.Win32.AltBrowse.ZPGI, TrojWare.Win32.AltBrowse.IZZV |
| DrWeb | Tool.NetFilter.313, Trojan.Yontoo.495, Trojan.BPlug.303 |
| ESET-NOD32 | a variant of MSIL/BrowseFox.H, a variant of Win64/BrowseFox.CG, a variant of Win32/BrowseFox.O, a variant of Win64/BrowseFox.CG potentially unwanted, a variant of Win32/BrowseFox.J |
| Emsisoft | Adware.SwiftBrowse.CH (B), Adware.BrowseFox.AQ (B), Adware.BrowseFox.V (B) |
| F-Prot | W64/A-59c9c70a!Eldorado, W32/S-aba79093!Eldorado, W32/S-669195eb!Eldorado, W32/A-76f53fd6!Eldorado |
| F-Secure | Adware.SwiftBrowse.CH, Adware.BrowseFox.AQ, Adware.BrowseFox.V |
| Fortinet | Riskware/BrowseFox, Adware/BrowseFox |
| GData | Adware.SwiftBrowse.CH, Adware.BrowseFox.AQ, Adware.BrowseFox.V |
| Ikarus | PUA.BrowseFox |
| Jiangmin | AdWare/Yotoon.aq, AdWare/Kranet.ao |
| K7AntiVirus | Adware ( 700000121 ), Trojan ( 0040f9921 ), Adware ( 0040f9f21 ), Trojan ( 004a07971 ) |
| K7GW | Adware ( 700000121 ), Adware ( 0040f9f21 ), Trojan ( 004a07971 ), Trojan ( 0040f9921 ) |
| Kaspersky | not-a-virus:NetTool.Win64.NetFilter.a, not-a-virus:HEUR:AdWare.Win32.Kranet.heur |
| Kingsoft | Win32.Troj.Generic.a.(kcloud) |
| Malwarebytes | PUP.Optional.SolutionReal.A |
| McAfee | Artemis!145DCB1F62D0, Artemis!DB22B9F3332D, Adware-BrowseFox, Artemis!E2850BC2E23D |
| McAfee-GW-Edition | Artemis, Adware-BrowseFox, Artemis!PUP |
| MicroWorld-eScan | Adware.SwiftBrowse.CH, Adware.BrowseFox.AQ, Adware.BrowseFox.V |
| NANO-Antivirus | Trojan.Win32.BPlug.dedpsr, Riskware.Win64.NetFilter.dnfypy, Riskware.Win32.Kranet.dgxoam, Riskware.Win32.NetFilter.dgkdox |
| Qihoo-360 | Win32/Virus.Adware.708, Win32/Virus.NetTool.32d, HEUR/QVM30.1.Malware.Gen, Win32/Virus.Adware.21f, HEUR/QVM10.1.Malware.Gen, HEUR/QVM00.1.Malware.Gen |
| Sophos | Generic PUA EF |
| Symantec | Yontoo.C, Trojan.Gen.2 |
| TrendMicro | HS_BROWSEFOX.SM |
| TrendMicro-HouseCall | Suspicious_GEN.F47V0130, Suspicious_GEN.F47V1230 |
| VBA32 | AdWare.Kranet, AdWare.LinkSwift, AdWare.Win64.Yotoon |
| VIPRE | Trojan.Win32.Generic!BT |
| Zillya | Adware.Yotoon.Win64.14, Backdoor.PePatch.Win32.57402, Backdoor.PePatch.Win32.52828, Backdoor.CPEX.Win32.29350 |
| nProtect | Adware.SwiftBrowse.CH, Adware.BrowseFox.AQ, Trojan-Clicker/W32.SwiftBrowse.296184, Adware.BrowseFox.V |
The detection percentage is based on that I have collected 1573 scan reports for the Solution Real files. 660 of these scan results came up with some sort of detection. You can view the full details of the scan results by examining the files listed above.
The analysis is done on certificates with the following serial numbers: