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Computer Security - Looking for better AV software |
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#1 |
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I abandoned the more popular commercial offerings a few years ago
because they tended to take over my machine, making it useless for long periods just when I wanted to use it. I have been using Panda since. Recently I have been disappointed with it due to spontaneous reboots that Microsoft says are caused by my AV software. Panda did not respond at all to my complaint about this. Another irritation is that the automatic update seems to mysteriously "break" a few weeks before it's time to renew the license. This brings me to the question, what's better than Panda, Norton & McAfee? TIA Ed Ed |
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#2 |
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Ed wrote:
> I abandoned the more popular commercial offerings a few years ago > because they tended to > take over my machine, making it useless for long periods just when I > wanted to use it. I have > been using Panda since. Recently I have been disappointed with it due > to spontaneous reboots > that Microsoft says are caused by my AV software. Panda did not > respond at all to my > complaint about this. Another irritation is that the automatic update > seems to mysteriously "break" a few > weeks before it's time to renew the license. > > This brings me to the question, what's better than Panda, Norton & > McAfee? > > TIA > > Ed > > > The best security is to recognize that no software is better than paying attention to what you click on. That said, AVG is quick, free, and isn't a resource hog. The number of opinions on which AV is best is the number of anti-virus programs ^ infinity, so your best bet is to evaluate several, and make sure you know security best practices. -- http://weblog.mkronline.com/ Michael Robinson |
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#3 |
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Thanks, Michael.
I have seen others here recommend AVG. I'll take a look. I don't mind paying for good software, but get irritated with it when it brings my machine to it's knees. I agree about not clicking on things... I'm even a little worried about clicking on your link Ed "Michael Robinson" <> wrote in message news:47e75$46ebf4fc$471d0bf2$... > > The best security is to recognize that no software is better than > paying attention to what you click on. > > That said, AVG is quick, free, and isn't a resource hog. The number > of opinions on which AV is best is the number of anti-virus programs > ^ infinity, so your best bet is to evaluate several, and make sure > you know security best practices. > > -- > http://weblog.mkronline.com/ > Ed |
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#4 |
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"Ed" <jag_manR__EM*-> wrote in news:5oSGi.9484$924.1270
@newssvr23.news.prodigy.net: > This brings me to the question, what's better than Panda, Norton & > McAfee? There are a number of effective AV programs which are quite lightweight. Of these NOD32 is highly regarded. In the heavyweight category are such as Kaspersky and Bitdefender (which uses two engines, one of which is Kaspersky's). Regards, PS Norton is a pig which will bring even a powerful system to its knees, and besides being bloatware it puts down roots which can be very difficult to remove. (Not for nothing has Symantec been forced to provide a "deep removal" tool.) nemo_outis |
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#5 |
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Ed wrote:
> Thanks, Michael. > > I have seen others here recommend AVG. I'll take a look. > > I don't mind paying for good software, but get irritated with it when > it brings my machine to it's knees. > > I agree about not clicking on things... I'm even a little worried > about clicking on your link > > Ed > > "Michael Robinson" <> wrote in message > news:47e75$46ebf4fc$471d0bf2$... <snip> >> > > > The link is safe - I keep WP updated religiously, and most of the potentially hackable scripts (in wp-admin) are locked down, so the risk of a compromise is low. If you're using Firefox (highly recommended, if only because of noscript) you can install noscript and negate the vast majority of potential website based attacks, though you might still need to worry about image and markup rendering-based exploits (rare). As for paying for software, AVG is only free in the sense that you can use the free version as a regular usser. It's commercial, but they (and most "free" AVs) get their money from volume licenses. You're essentially participating in wide-scale testing so Grisoft can tell volume buyers "Look how popular it is!". I think trading a statistic for a good AV is worth it. -- http://weblog.mkronline.com/ Michael Robinson |
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#6 |
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"Ed" <jag_manR__EM*-> wrote in message
news:5oSGi.9484$ t... >I abandoned the more popular commercial offerings a few years ago >because they tended to > take over my machine, making it useless for long periods just when I > wanted to use it. I have > been using Panda since. Recently I have been disappointed with it > due to spontaneous reboots > that Microsoft says are caused by my AV software. Panda did not > respond at all to my > complaint about this. Another irritation is that the automatic > update seems to mysteriously "break" a few > weeks before it's time to renew the license. > > This brings me to the question, what's better than Panda, Norton & > McAfee? I use AVG although it is the free version (the paid version includes more coverage, like for script blocking). It incurs little impact to my host (versus Avast! which had a significant impact). Antivir has good coverage but be prepared for nag screens on updates in the free version prompting you to buy their product and which interfere with fullscreen apps. I don't recall the impact on responsiveness to my host when using Antivir because I won't tolerate nagware (you can use IPS products, like System Safety Monitor, to keep their avnotify.exe program from loading but I shouldn't have to load more software to keep the nagware out of my face). However, if (more like when) I buy an AV product then Avira's AntiVir or Eset's NOD32 are likely candidates - but I'd first test it within a VM (in VMWare Server which is free) to guage its impact on responsiveness (for example, see what happens when you copy a couple thousand files with the AV configured to scan all files, not just executables - which is a stupid setup since any file regardless of filetype/extension can be executed if loaded into memory and has a header saying it is executable). McAfee will incur some impact to your host but how much depends on how much of their bloatware you install. My ISP provides a free copy to the McAfee suite. Their firewall is not very good (easy to terminate, bad or no logs, no HIPS to verify the parent that called the child that is making the connection is allowed, etc.). Their AV product all by itself isn't bad but unfortunately their coverage has been dropping over the last several months. http://www.av-comparatives.org/ Remember that these are tested using the full versions, not the free versions (which often lack several features, like script blocking, PUPs whitelisting, etc.). Panda has always rated so bad for on-demand scanning coverage that, as I recall, it has never made it into their top-most products table. http://www.virusbtn.com/vb100/archiv...isplay=vendors (you need to register to see their results) Use this VB100 award list to check on their *history* of performance, not on their coverage. Some examples of VB100 results: Alwil Avast!: 24 Success / 19 Failure (44% failed) Avira Antivir: 10 Success / 1 Failure ( 9% failed) Eset NOD32: 45 Success / 3 Failure ( 6% failed) Grisoft AVG: 18 Success / 22 Failure (55% failed) Kaspersky: 39 Success / 14 Failure (26% failed) McAfee: 32 Success / 19 Failure (37% failed) Microsoft OneCare: 2 Success / 1 Failure (50% failed) GeCAD RAV (*note1): 6 Success / 19 Failure (76% failed) Panda: 1 Success / 3 Failure (75% failed) Symantec CE (note2): 39 Success / 6 Failure (13% failed) *note1: GeCAD's RAV is what Microsoft bought to include as their AV product. *note2: Corporate Edition, not the Norton version. I use AVG (free) although it shows with a high failure rate. You have to look at the history to see how it fared in the latest tests (those most applicable to its current performance). The vast majority of its failed VB100 certification were before November 2002 (5 years ago). Do the same with other AV products in which you are interested since the overal failure rate may not reflect the current performance. Similarly, Avast's majority of failures were before Feb 2002. Go to http://www.virusbtn.com/vb100/archive/2007/08 (after logging in) and click on a vendor to see their history. VanguardLH |
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#7 |
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Michael Robinson wrote:
> Ed wrote: >> Thanks, Michael. >> >> I have seen others here recommend AVG. I'll take a look. >> >> I don't mind paying for good software, but get irritated with it when >> it brings my machine to it's knees. >> >> I agree about not clicking on things... I'm even a little worried >> about clicking on your link >> >> Ed >> >> "Michael Robinson" <> wrote in message >> news:47e75$46ebf4fc$471d0bf2$... > <snip> >>> >> >> >> > > The link is safe - I keep WP updated religiously, and most of the > potentially hackable scripts (in wp-admin) are locked down, so the risk > of a compromise is low. > > If you're using Firefox (highly recommended, if only because of > noscript) you can install noscript and negate the vast majority of > potential website based attacks, though you might still need to worry > about image and markup rendering-based exploits (rare). > > As for paying for software, AVG is only free in the sense that you can > use the free version as a regular usser. It's commercial, but they (and > most "free" AVs) get their money from volume licenses. You're > essentially participating in wide-scale testing so Grisoft can tell > volume buyers "Look how popular it is!". I think trading a statistic for > a good AV is worth it. > Well what you say may be true, but I have the paid version of AVG and think it is far better than either Norton or McAfee. Norton really took over my machine and I had to pay to have the last vestiges of it removed when I got rid of it. McAfee's version of update was to send you to its home page and dump you there. AVG (because I asked it to) sends a message every time there is an update. Sometimes there will be more than one a day. I pause, right click my icon, hit update and it goes up and gets it, installs it, and lets me know. All of this takes about 30 seconds and I'm back at work. It checks incoming and outgoing mail, etc. etc. See the bottom of this message. Finally, when I have had the occasional problem (once a scan picked up a NOAA navigation chart) and told them, they had a complete plan for a one-step download of your important config and logs and you add the file they fingered and they came right back and gave a full report. Real service. 'nuff said Gualtier Malde |
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#8 |
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Give NOD32 a try.
"Ed" <jag_manR__EM*-> wrote in message news:5oSGi.9484$ t... > I abandoned the more popular commercial offerings a few years ago because > they tended to > take over my machine, making it useless for long periods just when I > wanted to use it. I have > been using Panda since. Recently I have been disappointed with it due to > spontaneous reboots > that Microsoft says are caused by my AV software. Panda did not respond at > all to my > complaint about this. Another irritation is that the automatic update > seems to mysteriously "break" a few > weeks before it's time to renew the license. > > This brings me to the question, what's better than Panda, Norton & McAfee? > > TIA > > Ed > > Comcast Newsgroups |
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#9 |
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On Sat, 15 Sep 2007 07:56:39 -0700, "Ed"
<jag_manR__EM*-> wrote: >This brings me to the question, what's better than Panda, Norton & >McAfee? My personal taste is AVG which takes up fewer resources and seems to do the job. Saw a machine last week with the latest Avast AV on it, it also had a virus. Nod runs very slowly and Norton is a nightmare best removed from new machines. -- Jim Watt http://www.gibnet.com Jim Watt |
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#10 |
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If you don't mind paying NOD32 is a very good AV it has a small footprint
and doesn't try to take over your machine and it updates it's def files without any problems or without you having to stop what you are doing. I don't think you'd be sorry if you gave it a try. Joan Ed wrote: >I abandoned the more popular commercial offerings a few years ago > because they tended to > take over my machine, making it useless for long periods just when I > wanted to use it. I have > been using Panda since. Recently I have been disappointed with it due > to spontaneous reboots > that Microsoft says are caused by my AV software. Panda did not > respond at all to my > complaint about this. Another irritation is that the automatic update > seems to mysteriously "break" a few > weeks before it's time to renew the license. > > This brings me to the question, what's better than Panda, Norton & > McAfee? > > TIA > > Ed -- Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com Joan Archer |
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