Hey mr Tux, how about start up terminal and do this cmd
Code:
sudo find / -name "25984.emlx" -print
Type in your password. What you just did is told your system to do an ENTIRE file system scan (sudo = super user access so you aren't getting permission denied checks on key directories) for a file named "25984.emlx", if it finds a result -print it out to the screen.
This file probably has high permissions you can't remove it without root access, it *may* be a system file and isn't something you want to delete! So
a better alternative to straight out removing the problem is to perhaps use chmod and ls -L
ex:
you should see an example like this
-rw-r--r-- 1 root ZipO 45 Aug 8 21:09 Computer/example.txt
If you can get to this point, post a reply with these details.
If you really don't care and just want the sucker deleted, this is the course of action: Try to type
Replacing <location of file> with the directory printed out on find's result.
My guess however is that the file's permissions are too high for Norton antivirus to properly "repair" it, So you will probably have to super user remove it:
Code:
sudo rm <location of file>
I'm not responsible if you break your system with the above commands, use them at your own risk.
Hope it's helpful though.