Anti malware software you choose?
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Hello, Well, the topic line says it all: which would you choose? Free would be a nice option here... Thank you in advance! PS: it seems that in my couple computer Microsoft Security Essentials has allowed some critters to go in without advice... X|
[www.tamelectromecanica.com] Robots, CNC and PLC machines for grinding and polishing.
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Hello, Well, the topic line says it all: which would you choose? Free would be a nice option here... Thank you in advance! PS: it seems that in my couple computer Microsoft Security Essentials has allowed some critters to go in without advice... X|
[www.tamelectromecanica.com] Robots, CNC and PLC machines for grinding and polishing.
Avira AntiVir[^] I've been using it for about a year. A colleague recommended it to me and I've heard others speak well of it as well. I've heard rumors that the free (nagware) version is better than the paid version.
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Hello, Well, the topic line says it all: which would you choose? Free would be a nice option here... Thank you in advance! PS: it seems that in my couple computer Microsoft Security Essentials has allowed some critters to go in without advice... X|
[www.tamelectromecanica.com] Robots, CNC and PLC machines for grinding and polishing.
For three years I used a paid subscription to Kaspersky: when that expired I chose MS's Security Essentials based mainly on a long discussion here, on the Lounge. Now, in addition to the free MS Security Essentials, I use Panda AV (Cloud based), and run MalwareBytes Anti-Malware. Both Panda and Malwarebytes have located risks that MS Security Essentials missed. I do believe Panda AV may produce "false positives" when using Microsoft Windows Media Player, however. I particularly like Malwarebytes clean user-interface. I plan to upgrade to the purchased version of Malwarebytes. best, Bill
"Many : not conversant with mathematical studies, imagine that because it [the Analytical Engine] is to give results in numerical notation, its processes must consequently be arithmetical, numerical, rather than algebraical and analytical. This is an error. The engine can arrange and combine numerical quantities as if they were letters or any other general symbols; and it fact it might bring out its results in algebraical notation, were provisions made accordingly." Ada, Countess Lovelace, 1844
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Hello, Well, the topic line says it all: which would you choose? Free would be a nice option here... Thank you in advance! PS: it seems that in my couple computer Microsoft Security Essentials has allowed some critters to go in without advice... X|
[www.tamelectromecanica.com] Robots, CNC and PLC machines for grinding and polishing.
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Hello, Well, the topic line says it all: which would you choose? Free would be a nice option here... Thank you in advance! PS: it seems that in my couple computer Microsoft Security Essentials has allowed some critters to go in without advice... X|
[www.tamelectromecanica.com] Robots, CNC and PLC machines for grinding and polishing.
Hm... Nobody mentioned Comodo. I've been using it for more than a year, and it great. And also free. See how it compares to other: Test results
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Hello, Well, the topic line says it all: which would you choose? Free would be a nice option here... Thank you in advance! PS: it seems that in my couple computer Microsoft Security Essentials has allowed some critters to go in without advice... X|
[www.tamelectromecanica.com] Robots, CNC and PLC machines for grinding and polishing.
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Hello, Well, the topic line says it all: which would you choose? Free would be a nice option here... Thank you in advance! PS: it seems that in my couple computer Microsoft Security Essentials has allowed some critters to go in without advice... X|
[www.tamelectromecanica.com] Robots, CNC and PLC machines for grinding and polishing.
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Hello, Well, the topic line says it all: which would you choose? Free would be a nice option here... Thank you in advance! PS: it seems that in my couple computer Microsoft Security Essentials has allowed some critters to go in without advice... X|
[www.tamelectromecanica.com] Robots, CNC and PLC machines for grinding and polishing.
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Malware Bytes Free version is great for removing Malware once you get it. I haven't used the paid version so I'm not sure how good it is at catching the Malware before it takes over your computer. I would like to hear some comments on how good the paid version of Malware Bytes is since I have considered getting it for my company. Does it catch/pick up the Malware before it strikes? For a free solution Malware Bytes and AVG work nicely. The Free version of Avast isn't bad either and it allows you to do boot time scans, which some of the other Anti-Viruses I've used don't have that option. Surf Dog
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Hello, Well, the topic line says it all: which would you choose? Free would be a nice option here... Thank you in advance! PS: it seems that in my couple computer Microsoft Security Essentials has allowed some critters to go in without advice... X|
[www.tamelectromecanica.com] Robots, CNC and PLC machines for grinding and polishing.
I don't personally run A/V or MW cleaners, except for a scan once every 6 months to a year just to affirm my suspicions that my common sense practices haven't failed me. Unfortuntely, my clients consist of many individuals with varying degrees of common sense or knowledge of security practices. I highly recommend ESET AntiVirus (not free but works very well with low over-head and a low nag level). For malware MBAM (MalwareBytes) is free and decent. However, for better Malware proection you'll want to register MBAM because it will perform scheduled scanning. For those clients who click every link they see in front of their face, you'll want that, and the ESET firewall on high-guard. Then for the problem children, who can miraculously get infected as soon as they look at a computer, I would turn on some content protection like ContentWatch, add blacklists to the router, and then finally terminate their employment. rofl.
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Hello, Well, the topic line says it all: which would you choose? Free would be a nice option here... Thank you in advance! PS: it seems that in my couple computer Microsoft Security Essentials has allowed some critters to go in without advice... X|
[www.tamelectromecanica.com] Robots, CNC and PLC machines for grinding and polishing.
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Don't run an Antivirus (AV) product all the time, it's pointless. If you can't figure out why, ask and I'll explain but you should be able to get it. Get a decent firewall, Commodo is ok, run that constantly. And make sure all your programs and OS are up to date. No point having an AV without a firewall and a secure system. Once a week, update and run Malwarebytes, it's an antimalware program and quite good. Then update and run Spybot Search and Destroy. PC = secure and happy. That's for a Windows based PC anyway.
I'd like to hear your thoughts on "Don't run an antivirus app all the time" if you care to share! Thank You, Jason P Sage
Know way too many languages... master of none!
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Hello, Well, the topic line says it all: which would you choose? Free would be a nice option here... Thank you in advance! PS: it seems that in my couple computer Microsoft Security Essentials has allowed some critters to go in without advice... X|
[www.tamelectromecanica.com] Robots, CNC and PLC machines for grinding and polishing.
Symantec - bar none
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Malware Bytes Free version is great for removing Malware once you get it. I haven't used the paid version so I'm not sure how good it is at catching the Malware before it takes over your computer. I would like to hear some comments on how good the paid version of Malware Bytes is since I have considered getting it for my company. Does it catch/pick up the Malware before it strikes? For a free solution Malware Bytes and AVG work nicely. The Free version of Avast isn't bad either and it allows you to do boot time scans, which some of the other Anti-Viruses I've used don't have that option. Surf Dog
I have been using the paid version of Malware Bytes for about 1 year, problem free for home computer. I have it running with Avira no problems. I've had McAfee, Norton, and Symantec in the past and have gotten hosed (kids). Malware support spent 4 days helping me clean up the mess - Friday thru Monday, answering emails within a 2 hour window. For a one time fee, I was impressed with the response & quality of the help. McAfee & Symantec had non-existant customer support, and impacted the performance. Don't notice performance issues either with Malware & Avira. http://www.malwarebytes.org/mbam.php[^] http://www.avira.com/en/solutions/home_home_office.html[^]
Toto1107
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Hello, Well, the topic line says it all: which would you choose? Free would be a nice option here... Thank you in advance! PS: it seems that in my couple computer Microsoft Security Essentials has allowed some critters to go in without advice... X|
[www.tamelectromecanica.com] Robots, CNC and PLC machines for grinding and polishing.
AV-avast pro High praises the free edition is great but I like the added script stuff. I have used AVG but hated the way it updated and slowed the machine down. (Find update-install-reboot-look another update.) Malware-MBAM, spybot s&d system tools to handle the stuff those can't-sysinternals Love autoruns
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Hello, Well, the topic line says it all: which would you choose? Free would be a nice option here... Thank you in advance! PS: it seems that in my couple computer Microsoft Security Essentials has allowed some critters to go in without advice... X|
[www.tamelectromecanica.com] Robots, CNC and PLC machines for grinding and polishing.
I have been using "AVG Anti-Virus" for years and have recently added "Super Anti-Virus". I do alternating scans with both tools and have had no problems in years... I also have PC-Tools "Spyware Doctor" and "Trojan Hunter" but don't seem to need them...
Steve Naidamast Black Falcon Software, Inc. blackfalconsoftware@ix.netcom.com
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I'd like to hear your thoughts on "Don't run an antivirus app all the time" if you care to share! Thank You, Jason P Sage
Know way too many languages... master of none!
I don't know his/her thoughts but here is mine... I am not an ignorant user of my PC. I've been on the internet for as long as I've been using a PC (~15 years). I've seen and dealt with almost every malware or virus to come along during that time. In college, I frequently cleaned up other people's PCs and after college I worked tech support for one of the largest internet providers in the world for a few years where I helped other people over the phone clean up thier PC. On my PC, I know what is running and when it is running. I almost always have task manager running for other purposes so keeping an eye on the processes list is second nature. My computers all sit behind a firewall and I leave windows firewall enabled as well. I don't use browser plugins and don't allow autoupdate apps to run in the background on my PC (once again, I keep task manager open and I notice when a newly installed app starts one up). While I am browsing the web, when I come across a site that pops up a window that I didn't ask for, I close IE (yes, I primarily use IE) with task manager (task manager to the rescue again)... essentially, I am my own anti-virus/anti-malware....and in the rare occasions when someone else uses my computer and gets it infected, there are a plethora of excellent free tools available to remove it.
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Hello, Well, the topic line says it all: which would you choose? Free would be a nice option here... Thank you in advance! PS: it seems that in my couple computer Microsoft Security Essentials has allowed some critters to go in without advice... X|
[www.tamelectromecanica.com] Robots, CNC and PLC machines for grinding and polishing.
FYI I wont advertise Avast, I'll just post my experience so far: At first I used Avast4, then switched to AVG because i couldn't install it 'offline' after Windows reinstall. AVG was very good until they developed 'update failure' 2 yrs ago. Now I'm back to Avast Home and just love it.:thumbsup: Do you know how Vista/7 user actually runs in a separate, non-system session and elevation dialog is shown when system actually switches to 'SYSTEM' session? Avast5 has the same 'feature' when you try to uninstall it (well, I wasn't stupid yet to try to infect-test that). Also, Avast now uses html-renderer GUI, so any malware that is smart enough to simulate user click on the "yes I want to uninstall my antivirus" button won't be successful much (for now), because there isn't any HWND to find except the top window. It's free for home users, and you register through it's own dialog, no need for web browser, just enter your email and name, you have 60 days for that. If you buy pro license it unlocks pro features. Last time I checked, it's still cheaper than NOD32. Free edition has mail scanner, real-time scanner/shield, and it actively monitors all web traffic so it blocked 'drive-by' sites more than once for me. It also has silent 'gamer' mode. In the end, the interface is very much not-ugly. But that's just me. When you actually encounter smart malware, nothing will save you after you double click it, believe me - my golden rule: When in doubt, don't! I hope I helped. :)
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Hello, Well, the topic line says it all: which would you choose? Free would be a nice option here... Thank you in advance! PS: it seems that in my couple computer Microsoft Security Essentials has allowed some critters to go in without advice... X|
[www.tamelectromecanica.com] Robots, CNC and PLC machines for grinding and polishing.
Other posters have already mentioned MalwareBytes Anti-Malware (free) and SpyBot Search & Destroy (free) and Panda Cloud (free). I feel TeaTimer, part of SpyBot, is rather useless nowadays so I leave it off. Panda Cloud seems to catch things other AV vendors don't, but it comes at a performance penalty vs. no A/V at all. That's to be expected, but you can usually fine-tune McAfee or Norton to not totally hog your CPU and disk I/O when you need it. When I use my normal software (Propellerhead Reason) Panda locks up the program for a long time when I click Save. Sometimes I just shut it off while I save my work. Not the best, IMO, but better than nothing and you can't beat free. Webroot Spy Sweeper 2010 was worth every cent at $30 from the store. It cleaned up an awful mess that MBAM + SpyBot + Panda + ComboFix + all my other tricks just couldn't. It appears that some malware will actually try to alter your computer and router's DNS settings, in addition to setting up proxies in your browser. Reset those and flush the DNS resolver cache if you're getting awful redirects. An ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure, as they say, but it sounds like you might need the pound of cure at this point. To prevent further malware, uninstall Java completely (it's a tough bugger... Add/Remove Programs doesn't completely get rid of it) and keep your patches up to date. Enable the PID column in your Task Manager so you can kill things by the number via the Start-Run command if you must, such as when something disables starting new programs, disables cmd, disables regedit + sys info + msconfig, and autokills taskman after half a second (hope you can read fast)... I've seen stuff do all that and then some.
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Hello, Well, the topic line says it all: which would you choose? Free would be a nice option here... Thank you in advance! PS: it seems that in my couple computer Microsoft Security Essentials has allowed some critters to go in without advice... X|
[www.tamelectromecanica.com] Robots, CNC and PLC machines for grinding and polishing.
Been using Avast! since 2006 and I love it. The free "home" version is great. I love the ability to run boot time scans and it has picked up drive by attacks many times on my wife's machine. As for performance I have to double check from time to time that it is even running because it just stays out of my way.