I can't play freelancer anymore.
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antivirus softwares are being updated only after a new virus is made. so they only protect against attacks known to the antivirus branch. if you are really being under attack your only chance is to know who you trust and block contact to any machine that even could be dangerous. being paranoic is the very safest and only safe way - no matter what protection system you install.
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Oh… IT Security - different deep and complex topic, antivirus rating - too ;(
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Zero-day exploits do exist, but they aren’t the primary infection you’ll encounter. Why? Because each zero-day exploit eventually is fixed, but still stays in the wild, so you end up with thousands of possible infections just waiting for you.
An antivirus helps you block those 99.95% that have been around for a while. Obviously, the best defense is to get a patch for the vulnerability that is being exploited, but this might not always be possible.
Being paranoid is a little too much. Have some common sense and you’ll be fine, but just remember hackers aren’t always coming for you. Keep your stuff updated as much as you can, keep an antivirus running, use a firewall if you think you need one and, most importantly, avoid fishy sites and emails.
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HeIIoween wrote:
About antivirus i prefer Microsoft Security Essentials - truly compatible with FL :))me too, its good
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Nonsense, you could get hit by a drive by download without even knowing it from potentially any site out there. Everyone has to face up to the fact that the web is not safe no matter where you surf, sure you can prevent most things by not being a twit, most things by using free AV software, but if you want to bolt your PC down as best you can then you need to use a solid bit of security like Kaspersky or unplug.
Personally I use two computers, one bolted down tight as hell laptop with which I take care of all my business requirements, I never use it for anything other than business or purchasing. Then I have a gaming machine, I only use light security (MS security essentials) on it as it doesn’t interfere with anything. A gaming machine with Norton or Kaspersky is a pain in the arse.
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Nonsense, you could get hit by a drive by download without even knowing it from potentially any site out there. Everyone has to face up to the fact that the web is not safe no matter where you surf, sure you can prevent most things by not being a twit, most things by using free AV software, but if you want to bolt your PC down as best you can then you need to use a solid bit of security like Kaspersky or unplug.
Well, you can deactivate JavaScript which will help you a lot against drive-by-downloads, I guess. You can deactivate it generally, or for the Fx extension NoScript for just all sites for which you don’t allow it.
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Isn’t it one of the primary functions of a firewall to block drive-by-downloads?
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Get Start with Free AV.
I’m no going to bother with KAV now. My boss got 3 KAV for company’s computer last year, when i open the smelly box, installed the software into computers, all of computer get slow and lag and freeze……Now i install the MSE on those computer and looks it running so high.
As my self, i use the Avira AntiVir Personal on my computer, the good point is: it’s not make computer slow and lag. And if you don’t want to see the popup ad(When update), you can pay money for a Avira AntiVir Premium.
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I have seen absolutely ZERO conclusive evidence that you’re more secure with paid AV than free AV. You’ll have to back those claims up, Timmy.
Furthermore, drive-by-downloads are what I mean by paranoid. They’re not out there for you, remember! Yes, there was a time where they could be a potential threat. That time was called “IE dominance”. Browsers such as Firefox are very safe and the likeliness of you getting such a download are near zero. As Bas said, you can get NoScript running if you want (I do it).
Last thing: you can never achieve 100% security. You need to shoot for some acceptable tradeoff between security and usability. Therein lies the entire debate: where to draw the line? I think if you’re at the point where you imagine the Internet as the far west with less rules, you might be going too far. It can be harsh, but you’re just a nobody on the highway, you’re not a valuable target to anything but botnet builders, and those use very traditional techniques (spam, bad sites).
To get infected while browsing safe sites is something so unlikely you simply cannot think about protecting yourself from it. Chances are that, if it had to happen, your protections would be worthless anyways.
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i had the free version of avira for the last two and a half years, even multiple mounts without any AV software (active) and almost always a deactivated firewall. haven’t experienced yet anything, my machine even runs better than on first day. it is really a question of what web server you are accessing to. there is even a massive difference between the different google servers, where by the same targets you are being led on the one hand to trustworthy sites, forums and blogs and on the other hand to sites with illegal downloads full of adds like “we haven’t detected an AV on your harddrive - klick here!”
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Please, could you stop speak about it, this subject is overtreated. If you want to speak about that creat a new post.
My freelancer reworks because I’m going to configs > menaces and exclusion > Exclusions > configs > non dangerous apps > add an app > FL.exe > and finaly tick all boxes.
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FriendlyFire wrote:
I have seen absolutely ZERO conclusive evidence that you’re more secure with paid AV than free AV. You’ll have to back those claims up, Timmy.Pull the other one FF, that means you’ve either never looked or simply don’t believe the labs that test the software. Most free antivirus solutions don’t have adware or spyware detection for starters, lack the ability to decompress many file types which would be used to change the signature of known virus types, don’t have bi-directional firewalls. All you get with free AV is the ability to detect “most” acknowledged ITW (in the wild) trojans and worms etc. That represents a percentage of “known” virus types, but you’re not paying for the software so you don’t get a full library. You can bet you’re arse you’ll get more false positives with free software and a far worse detection rate.
To be paranoid about internet security would be silly if you were referring to an individual hacker specifically targetting you, but to believe that the internet is not overflowing with opportunistic parasites just looking for a meal is rediculous.
This is not even worth having an argument about, you know it as well as I do unless you’re deliberately being ignorant for the sake of a disagreement.
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Ah, so you’re not talking about an antivirus at all. You do realize when I want an AV, I’m speaking of an AV? I don’t want them to attach a spyware detector, firewall, parental control, remote management and coffee maker to the mix!
I’ll get a spyware detector tool myself, I’ll get a firewall myself if I so desire. Having an all-around suite and comparing it to a strict antivirus is disingenuous. Free solutions can be found separately and perform just as well (if not better) as the built-in paid solutions.
You’re wrong about the detection rate. Many free AVs have extremely high detection rates. False positives are extremely variable and to be honest, I’d rather have a few more false positives if it means it detects more threats.
Also, your last line isn’t a good way to try to get your point across, Timmy.
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to assist FF a bit: a software that is programmed for one purpose usually does its job better than if it has five jobs. however, a decompressing process is sensible to check archives for viruses, too and probably with one good tool you can manage the functions easier and faster. paying for them is ridiculous though just due to that browsing sensibly will safe you far better than any software.
anyway, its up to each user how he wants to protect his machine and whether he wants to protect it himself or to make the computer to compute its protection itself. also, whether a user wants to pay for his machine’s protection or not and whether there is anything on his machine important enough to need protection.
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There is a use in AV, but little if you know how to avoid getting infected. Not using a bad browser, avoiding suspicious sites, not clicking stupid ads and having common sense when reading email from unknown sources. Last I read Kaspersky and NOD32 was the 2 best pay-for AVs.
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FF. I’ve zipped up the pdf reports from AV.comparitives for you to browse through if you so wish. Plenty of data there but don’t expect to find results for crap like spybot and other mediocre pieces of software.
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And why Spybot is crap?
Gisteron, Safari is definitivly NOT very safe, at least not the windows version. That’s what I read some time ago.
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Timmy51m wrote:
FF. I’ve zipped up the pdf reports from AV.comparitives for you to browse through if you so wish. Plenty of data there but don’t expect to find results for crap like spybot and other mediocre pieces of software.What this tells me is that Kingsoft is crap, but since it doesn’t include any free AV, there’s absolutely nothing worth discussing in there. Maybe paid AV is better, maybe it is not, but you cannot base yourself off this data to say so.
Bas, Safari is built on Webkit which is a rather safe browsing engine. Much safer than Trident at least. Obviously the best security can currently be achieved through Firefox with AdBlock Plus and NoScript, but in terms of vanilla configuration, Webkit’s on the safer side because it is a small portion of the market. IE is much more targeted and Firefox will probably be more and more as its share grows. You could expect the same from Chrome if their share keeps on growing.
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Only software that had recieved certification was tested. If the software did not achieve a minimum level of security under test it didn’t get certified and it was discarded. If it is not on the list, consider it worse than Kingsoft which in your words is crap, so I figure It’s fairly safe to say so as you put it.
MS security essentials features in tests it qualifies for and does rather well, that’s free and getting better with every version. What I was attempting to illustrate is that even top notch paid for AV will let a percentage through whilst surfing, what that says to me is that it’s wise to use a fairly good piece of software if you have data on a machine that’s worth protecting. AVG will be the first to tell you that the free version of the software they provide is not near as good as the paid for, if it wasn’t who would ever pay?
Each to their own.