![]() ![]() If the certificate isn't there or looks different, your brother downloaded a shady, possibly malicious copy somewhere. This is what it looks on my legit copy when I double click the certificate: I can't screenshot the windows dialog but a different way you can check the signature is right clicking the installer, going to 'Digital Signatures', and seeing if the signature is there. If it's not signed, something is definitely wrong. Is your brother 100% sure he downloaded bluestacks from the right place? If he has a legit copy, it will be signed by 'Bluestacks Systems, Inc.' when you try to launch the installer, and windows pops up that dialog of 'do you want to allow this program to make changes to your PC'. You do not have to worry because Blues stack does not fall under the same category as the Nintendo game boy. You cannot stop people from asking these types of the question if you look back into the history of the Nintendo and Gameboy emulators. If you're in the USA and the login is from like Russia or something then something is definitely up. It is common among the people that is Bluestack is legal or not. Is your brother using a VPN, or is the area somewhat close by? ![]() But I would expect the area to be +- in the area you live in, or at least where your ISP is. Google does usually e-mail you about new logins from the Bluestacks emulator. They have their revenue streams like advertising and the whole 'game platform' shebang, it would be an utterly dumb business decision to start hacking people's accounts on the side lol. For a non-PR-canned answer, yeah, I believe it's safe because they're a legit company and wouldn't risk going under for like. ![]()
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