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Antivirus

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  • I Ian Shlasko

    Teo Gaona wrote:

    On other hand this kind of virus is so effective that affect also backups that is a located in a no accessible location inside the drive.

    That's not a real backup. A real backup is either on a different machine, or on removable media.

    Teo Gaona wrote:

    My point is that, should be better use only free antivirus like Microsoft Essential security, because If you take a paid AV because looks better can take you to a trap, if the AV Co. is involved in this kind of activities.

    Don't generalize like that. Some paid AV tools are good, some are crap. Some free ones are good, some are crap. Check reviews. Do your research. Make smart decisions. And if you see a popup saying "Your computer may be infected! Click here to get Super Duper Virus Killer Plus 2012!!!1!11!1one"... Do yourself a favor and don't click it[^]

    Proud to have finally moved to the A-Ark. Which one are you in?
    Author of the Guardians Saga (Sci-Fi/Fantasy novels)

    J Offline
    J Offline
    jeron1
    wrote on last edited by
    #12

    Ian Shlasko wrote:

    That's not a real backup. A real backup is either on a different machine, or on removable media.

    Amen, I've spoken to a couple of people fairly recently who have actually argued with me about this. :wtf:

    Ian Shlasko wrote:

    Don't generalize like that. Some paid AV tools are good, some are crap. Some free ones are good, some are crap. Check reviews. Do your research. Make smart decisions.

    Agreed!:thumbsup:

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    • T Teo Gaona

      Hi, This year I did not renewed my antivirus subscription with a well known antivirus company, 2 month later l lost all my data due to virus activity, even having a new paid antivirus. Last year, the same I did not renewed my subscription and change to a free antivirus and also after 2 moth I lost my hard drive, also a well known antivirus company. Call my attention these cases so I would like to know if some of you has experienced same lost in similar situation? I suspect that if you do not renew your subscription some hacker will take care of you. Can the antivirus Co. be involved, dont know, only if there is data of same cases can we know. The result in my case it is that I'm changing to mac due to pc is very affected by virus mafia, so I think Microsoft and other pc companies should take this situation seriously, because pc environment will be reduced and mac will grow also linux. thanks, Teo

      J Offline
      J Offline
      Joan M
      wrote on last edited by
      #13

      I would say that you should stop seeing pr0n in your computer. Too much viruses are hitting you... :rolleyes:

      [www.tamautomation.com] Robots, CNC and PLC machines for grinding and polishing.

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      • J Joan M

        I would say that you should stop seeing pr0n in your computer. Too much viruses are hitting you... :rolleyes:

        [www.tamautomation.com] Robots, CNC and PLC machines for grinding and polishing.

        L Offline
        L Offline
        lewax00
        wrote on last edited by
        #14

        Just like real life: if you don't use protection, you can get viruses! :laugh:

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        • L Lost User

          IMHO - The best AV solution is free and located between ones ears.

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          S Offline
          Szabolcs Mate
          wrote on last edited by
          #15

          Common sense with a bit of experience beats them all. It might also help to stay away from "free" software. Even if not "pirated-free". I'd personally call toolbars malware and those come with otherwise decent free products from reputable companies. :(

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          • T Teo Gaona

            Hi, This year I did not renewed my antivirus subscription with a well known antivirus company, 2 month later l lost all my data due to virus activity, even having a new paid antivirus. Last year, the same I did not renewed my subscription and change to a free antivirus and also after 2 moth I lost my hard drive, also a well known antivirus company. Call my attention these cases so I would like to know if some of you has experienced same lost in similar situation? I suspect that if you do not renew your subscription some hacker will take care of you. Can the antivirus Co. be involved, dont know, only if there is data of same cases can we know. The result in my case it is that I'm changing to mac due to pc is very affected by virus mafia, so I think Microsoft and other pc companies should take this situation seriously, because pc environment will be reduced and mac will grow also linux. thanks, Teo

            A Offline
            A Offline
            Alan Burkhart
            wrote on last edited by
            #16

            Teo Gaona wrote:

            Can the antivirus Co. be involved, dont know, only if there is data of same cases can we know.

            I have occasionally wondered if it wouldn't be in the interest of commercial outfits like Symantec to keep us all paranoid about viruses. Regardless, there are plenty of bad guys out there who genuinely want to take over computers to do their deeds. I haven't used a commercial AV program in years (I use the free version of Avast). I've been hit with one virus, ever. Back in 1999 I unthinkingly opened an email attachment from a friend in spite of it having no extension. McAfee allowed it to run, and it took 2 days to get my machine cleaned up. She had no clue her computer had just emailed a virus to everyone in her Outlook address book.

            XAlan Burkhart

            D R 2 Replies Last reply
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            • T Teo Gaona

              Hi, This year I did not renewed my antivirus subscription with a well known antivirus company, 2 month later l lost all my data due to virus activity, even having a new paid antivirus. Last year, the same I did not renewed my subscription and change to a free antivirus and also after 2 moth I lost my hard drive, also a well known antivirus company. Call my attention these cases so I would like to know if some of you has experienced same lost in similar situation? I suspect that if you do not renew your subscription some hacker will take care of you. Can the antivirus Co. be involved, dont know, only if there is data of same cases can we know. The result in my case it is that I'm changing to mac due to pc is very affected by virus mafia, so I think Microsoft and other pc companies should take this situation seriously, because pc environment will be reduced and mac will grow also linux. thanks, Teo

              L Offline
              L Offline
              Lost User
              wrote on last edited by
              #17

              Fully 99% of virus protection is refusing to open/download/visit every website/attachment/link that features omg, this is so cute you must see this! I actually changed my email address and only passed it out to people who didn't have a history of sending me attachments or links to every bit of garbage they find on the webnets. Nobody needs free e-cards or a link to musical farting bunny rabbits. If you spend your time with those things you will get a virus. Period.

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              • T Teo Gaona

                Hi, This year I did not renewed my antivirus subscription with a well known antivirus company, 2 month later l lost all my data due to virus activity, even having a new paid antivirus. Last year, the same I did not renewed my subscription and change to a free antivirus and also after 2 moth I lost my hard drive, also a well known antivirus company. Call my attention these cases so I would like to know if some of you has experienced same lost in similar situation? I suspect that if you do not renew your subscription some hacker will take care of you. Can the antivirus Co. be involved, dont know, only if there is data of same cases can we know. The result in my case it is that I'm changing to mac due to pc is very affected by virus mafia, so I think Microsoft and other pc companies should take this situation seriously, because pc environment will be reduced and mac will grow also linux. thanks, Teo

                E Offline
                E Offline
                etkid84
                wrote on last edited by
                #18

                browser security. Eliminating really bad insecure web technologies. Strengthening the "sandbox" model and ensuring browser activity remains contained within a well-defined sandbox that can be wiped clean when a browser is removed from the platform. More emphasis should be placed on user anonymity to ensure freedom of expression and eliminate all the "nosey" actors who want to know everything about you. I often wondered if anti-virus software was just another scam to steal all the data off of your platform.:suss:

                David

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                • I Ian Shlasko

                  Umm, you know Microsoft Security Essentials (MSE) is free, right? EDIT: Oh, and the last virus that I've actually been hit by (As opposed to my AV snagging - I've been through Mcafee, Avast, Avira, Norton, and now MSE) was Monkey B... Now, the Monkey virus was a fun one... Back in the DOS days... It infected your boot sector, and basically set your computer up so any new drive it detected would become infected... And if that new drive was read-only, your computer wouldn't even be able to read it. The best part was, if you cleaned it with the wrong anti-virus software (such as Norton), it would wipe the boot sector and essentially brick your machine (Not entirely bricked, but really had to know your stuff to fix it)... Norton bricked the box, Mcafee went *poof* fixed. That was when I switched to Mcafee :)

                  Proud to have finally moved to the A-Ark. Which one are you in?
                  Author of the Guardians Saga (Sci-Fi/Fantasy novels)

                  M Offline
                  M Offline
                  Michael Varey
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #19

                  On the other hand, McAfee, while being good, is itself one of the worst culprits for interfering with system operation, sometimes so bad that the system might as well be bricked cause it is unusably slow. It's too bad that antivirus software is sometimes almost as bad as the software it is protecting you against. mvarey

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                  • E etkid84

                    browser security. Eliminating really bad insecure web technologies. Strengthening the "sandbox" model and ensuring browser activity remains contained within a well-defined sandbox that can be wiped clean when a browser is removed from the platform. More emphasis should be placed on user anonymity to ensure freedom of expression and eliminate all the "nosey" actors who want to know everything about you. I often wondered if anti-virus software was just another scam to steal all the data off of your platform.:suss:

                    David

                    S Offline
                    S Offline
                    SortaCore
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #20

                    Sandboxing downloads is a good idea. I have Sandboxie, which is free to use, but I'm wondering if there's a better (ideally free) solution for protection like this.

                    E 1 Reply Last reply
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                    • S SortaCore

                      Sandboxing downloads is a good idea. I have Sandboxie, which is free to use, but I'm wondering if there's a better (ideally free) solution for protection like this.

                      E Offline
                      E Offline
                      etkid84
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #21

                      restricting the browser to a sandbox with limited privileges

                      David

                      S 1 Reply Last reply
                      0
                      • E etkid84

                        restricting the browser to a sandbox with limited privileges

                        David

                        S Offline
                        S Offline
                        SortaCore
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #22

                        I meant more of a standalone sandbox program than just a secure browser. I use Chrome generally btw.

                        1 Reply Last reply
                        0
                        • A Alan Burkhart

                          Teo Gaona wrote:

                          Can the antivirus Co. be involved, dont know, only if there is data of same cases can we know.

                          I have occasionally wondered if it wouldn't be in the interest of commercial outfits like Symantec to keep us all paranoid about viruses. Regardless, there are plenty of bad guys out there who genuinely want to take over computers to do their deeds. I haven't used a commercial AV program in years (I use the free version of Avast). I've been hit with one virus, ever. Back in 1999 I unthinkingly opened an email attachment from a friend in spite of it having no extension. McAfee allowed it to run, and it took 2 days to get my machine cleaned up. She had no clue her computer had just emailed a virus to everyone in her Outlook address book.

                          XAlan Burkhart

                          D Offline
                          D Offline
                          Dave GA
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #23

                          Here is a different take about the AV companies profiting from the virus scare (which I believe is real). Recently, a large, mainstream AV company started blocking our customers from downloading our product from our web site. They reported that they had detected a threat in it that they called WS.Reputation.1. But they more than just warned the user; they automatically quarantined the file and told the user that they had deleted it to protect the user's computer. It turns out, you can Google it, that WS.Reputation.1 is not a virus or malware of any kind! It is just this company's way of saying that so few of their customers have downloaded this file that they do not have enough data to know whether or not it has adversely affected those who have downloaded it. It took me over a week to get our installer added to their "white list" for the current version. Now, every time we release an updated version we have to go through the process again of getting it approved and added to their white list. I am wondering if it would be incorrectly marked as infected if I bought a digital signing certificate and signed the code. Oh yeah, guess who is one of the biggest sellers of digital certificates?

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                          • L lewax00

                            Very true. The only viruses I've ever gotten were when I was young(er) and stupid(er?), and trusted executables from shady sources (a good learning experience though, it was part of what got me started down this path). I've never gotten one from simply browsing the internet or anything like that (people claim it's possible, but I'm skeptical).

                            O Offline
                            O Offline
                            oPhoenixo
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #24

                            I'm in the camp that believes its possible to get malware- it's the only explanation for how I and my family members got a virus. I'm really picky where I download from, and where on the interwebs I browse usually, but occassionally I've been to the shady sides of the net. I think a lot of it can be stopped by not logging in as admin as I stubbornly did for a long time. My daughter used to have a lower access account, within a few months of giving her admin access she got some sort of malware (I'm lumping them together). If you're not logged in as admin you may have benefited from this layer of protection.

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                            0
                            • T Teo Gaona

                              Hi, This year I did not renewed my antivirus subscription with a well known antivirus company, 2 month later l lost all my data due to virus activity, even having a new paid antivirus. Last year, the same I did not renewed my subscription and change to a free antivirus and also after 2 moth I lost my hard drive, also a well known antivirus company. Call my attention these cases so I would like to know if some of you has experienced same lost in similar situation? I suspect that if you do not renew your subscription some hacker will take care of you. Can the antivirus Co. be involved, dont know, only if there is data of same cases can we know. The result in my case it is that I'm changing to mac due to pc is very affected by virus mafia, so I think Microsoft and other pc companies should take this situation seriously, because pc environment will be reduced and mac will grow also linux. thanks, Teo

                              F Offline
                              F Offline
                              Fabio Franco
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #25

                              Getting computer virus is like getting an STD... If you put your thingies anywhere and don't use protection, you're bound to get infected by a deadly virus. Even when you use protection, sometimes it fails, but if you don't usually have risky behavior, the likelihood to get infected is very slim, even when you're not 100% protected. You don't need to abstain :)

                              To alcohol! The cause of, and solution to, all of life's problems - Homer Simpson ---- Our heads are round so our thoughts can change direction - Francis Picabia

                              1 Reply Last reply
                              0
                              • T Teo Gaona

                                Hi, This year I did not renewed my antivirus subscription with a well known antivirus company, 2 month later l lost all my data due to virus activity, even having a new paid antivirus. Last year, the same I did not renewed my subscription and change to a free antivirus and also after 2 moth I lost my hard drive, also a well known antivirus company. Call my attention these cases so I would like to know if some of you has experienced same lost in similar situation? I suspect that if you do not renew your subscription some hacker will take care of you. Can the antivirus Co. be involved, dont know, only if there is data of same cases can we know. The result in my case it is that I'm changing to mac due to pc is very affected by virus mafia, so I think Microsoft and other pc companies should take this situation seriously, because pc environment will be reduced and mac will grow also linux. thanks, Teo

                                S Offline
                                S Offline
                                snowman53
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #26

                                I personally use NOD32, which seems to have the lowest performance impact and a high capture rating in testing. I also use a program (Host Manager) that blocks most ad and malicious sites through your hosts file. Apple has recently had to up it's anti virus game since it's market share is reaching the point that the bad guys are attacking iOS systems. So a switch to a Mac is only a delaying tactic not a solution. But as pointed out above - visits to questionable web sites and falling for the fake "You have a problem click here" is by far the main source of problems.

                                R 1 Reply Last reply
                                0
                                • D Dave GA

                                  Here is a different take about the AV companies profiting from the virus scare (which I believe is real). Recently, a large, mainstream AV company started blocking our customers from downloading our product from our web site. They reported that they had detected a threat in it that they called WS.Reputation.1. But they more than just warned the user; they automatically quarantined the file and told the user that they had deleted it to protect the user's computer. It turns out, you can Google it, that WS.Reputation.1 is not a virus or malware of any kind! It is just this company's way of saying that so few of their customers have downloaded this file that they do not have enough data to know whether or not it has adversely affected those who have downloaded it. It took me over a week to get our installer added to their "white list" for the current version. Now, every time we release an updated version we have to go through the process again of getting it approved and added to their white list. I am wondering if it would be incorrectly marked as infected if I bought a digital signing certificate and signed the code. Oh yeah, guess who is one of the biggest sellers of digital certificates?

                                  A Offline
                                  A Offline
                                  Alan Burkhart
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #27

                                  Very good points. I've come to believe that nowadays just about everything is a racket of some sort. Business, religion, politics (obviously), whatever.

                                  XAlan Burkhart

                                  1 Reply Last reply
                                  0
                                  • D Dave GA

                                    Here is a different take about the AV companies profiting from the virus scare (which I believe is real). Recently, a large, mainstream AV company started blocking our customers from downloading our product from our web site. They reported that they had detected a threat in it that they called WS.Reputation.1. But they more than just warned the user; they automatically quarantined the file and told the user that they had deleted it to protect the user's computer. It turns out, you can Google it, that WS.Reputation.1 is not a virus or malware of any kind! It is just this company's way of saying that so few of their customers have downloaded this file that they do not have enough data to know whether or not it has adversely affected those who have downloaded it. It took me over a week to get our installer added to their "white list" for the current version. Now, every time we release an updated version we have to go through the process again of getting it approved and added to their white list. I am wondering if it would be incorrectly marked as infected if I bought a digital signing certificate and signed the code. Oh yeah, guess who is one of the biggest sellers of digital certificates?

                                    O Offline
                                    O Offline
                                    onemorechance
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #28

                                    That sucks. Sounds like corporate extortion. Stuff like that is why I am not a big fan of AV companies.

                                    1 Reply Last reply
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                                    • T Teo Gaona

                                      Hi, This year I did not renewed my antivirus subscription with a well known antivirus company, 2 month later l lost all my data due to virus activity, even having a new paid antivirus. Last year, the same I did not renewed my subscription and change to a free antivirus and also after 2 moth I lost my hard drive, also a well known antivirus company. Call my attention these cases so I would like to know if some of you has experienced same lost in similar situation? I suspect that if you do not renew your subscription some hacker will take care of you. Can the antivirus Co. be involved, dont know, only if there is data of same cases can we know. The result in my case it is that I'm changing to mac due to pc is very affected by virus mafia, so I think Microsoft and other pc companies should take this situation seriously, because pc environment will be reduced and mac will grow also linux. thanks, Teo

                                      C Offline
                                      C Offline
                                      Clodetta del Mar
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #29

                                      Hm, i do not face the probs you are facing... my home machine runs avast and my firewall is always off, it happened a long time ago that avast found a potential harmful threat. it selected an appropriate action to take and everything was fine again... maybe switching to mac would solve that particular issue for you, but keep in mind that, on the other hand, it comes with a plethora of other problems (no right mouse, no multimonitor, no hyper v, with virtualization i'm not quite sure at the moment...is there a chance to virtualize machines on an apple..i doubt that, but don't know exactly.., in case of the newer apple-products which all have to be sooo ultrathin, the accumulator is GLUED to the mainboard, not screwed in order to save some space...that is to name a few) and as steve mayfield stated, the mac is no longer in 'safe mode'... ;-) nice regards, clodetta

                                      1 Reply Last reply
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                                      • M Michael Varey

                                        On the other hand, McAfee, while being good, is itself one of the worst culprits for interfering with system operation, sometimes so bad that the system might as well be bricked cause it is unusably slow. It's too bad that antivirus software is sometimes almost as bad as the software it is protecting you against. mvarey

                                        O Offline
                                        O Offline
                                        onemorechance
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #30

                                        Years ago (10 or so, not exactly sure), McAfee was a corporate standard where I worked. Piece of crap, slow, and buggy. And it even caused problems with Visual Studio ... a really weird bug that prevented a drop down list box from showing up on a project. Needless to say, McAfee didn't last long on my team's PCs.

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                                        • T Teo Gaona

                                          Hi, This year I did not renewed my antivirus subscription with a well known antivirus company, 2 month later l lost all my data due to virus activity, even having a new paid antivirus. Last year, the same I did not renewed my subscription and change to a free antivirus and also after 2 moth I lost my hard drive, also a well known antivirus company. Call my attention these cases so I would like to know if some of you has experienced same lost in similar situation? I suspect that if you do not renew your subscription some hacker will take care of you. Can the antivirus Co. be involved, dont know, only if there is data of same cases can we know. The result in my case it is that I'm changing to mac due to pc is very affected by virus mafia, so I think Microsoft and other pc companies should take this situation seriously, because pc environment will be reduced and mac will grow also linux. thanks, Teo

                                          T Offline
                                          T Offline
                                          Thornik
                                          wrote on last edited by
                                          #31

                                          I would go further and change Mac to a microwave, since MW has no viruses at all. From my 22 years experiense I was infected may be 2-3 times, NEVER EVER having any antivirus software. Why? Just same principle like you wash hands every time before eating: 1. NEVER run any exe/com/bat coming from email. Even if it comes from your mom. ESPECIALLY if it come from your mom. 2. Switch off any web-sh*t like a flash, music, video. Disallow JS to change windows shape (Opera can do it best way). 3. Always check any DVD you've bought, esp. pirate. 4. Never click any banner, "earn here" and so on shitylinks. 5. Put some firewall to control every cr@p accessing IN. I use BWMeter, it's enough. 6. Keep archives of everything priceless like your photo with american flag - on a separate HDD or flash. Never ever use for backup cr@p like CD/DVD - it's unreliable and it's dead. Like this!

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