Kaspersky uses a very disputable "heuristic" algorithm in excess of the rock solid and reliable "signatures" database. It means that it tries to guess whether (what it thinks is) a given code sequence could be illegal code or a tentative of exploit. The problem is that it's impossible to predict what action a particular sequence of code will actually perform in megabytes large programs will result into (and this is to suppose that this "suspect" bytes sequence is actually code and not plain data !). The result is a LOAD of false positives, making such anti-virus software a real nuisance.
Simply disable the heuristic engine, or change for a 100% signatures based anti-virus (I'd recommend ClamWin which is freeware and which signatures database is updated daily).
You could also try to white-list the problematic component (SLPlugin.exe, apparently, which sounds logical since it's used to launch plugins, something that probably looks "suspect" to Kapersky's heuristic engine, even though SLPlugin.exe will never load anything else than the harmless plugins bundled together with the viewer...), if this anti-virus supports white-listing, of course...