Author Topic: virus is neutralized  (Read 4088 times)

Noedit:
I don't judge them by stability, I judge by what features they have and how they catch a virus using them (ex. Kaspersky's Proactive Defense which catches most recent virii that aren't in the virus database yet)
I'm pretty sure Avast detects malware properly. I suppose Kaspersky is decent, but Norton and McAffee with their endless false positives and ridiculous resource usage can go to hell.

I'm pretty sure Avast detects malware properly. I suppose Kaspersky is decent, but Norton and McAffee with their endless false positives and ridiculous resource usage can go to hell.
Norton and McAfee are crap.
ZoneAlarm also gives false positives, usually because games and keyloggers capture input the same way.

I'm pretty sure Avast detects malware properly. I suppose Kaspersky is decent, but Norton and McAffee with their endless false positives and ridiculous resource usage can go to hell.
I had both AVs on my system

Norton was a piece of stuff and only had a list of cookies, nothing worth taking action and a waste of my time. Uninstalled.
McAfee was an annoyance to my fullscreen games and crashed them when ever it had to run one of its "scans", turns out its not a good virus scanner that doesn't even scan for viruses. Uninstalled.

"Desktop\garbage\Hacks\NFSMW\p..."

So I heard you suck at Need For Speed

I thought the default Windows Defender that comes with Windows 7 was a virus :L

I got a virus once just because I spelled a website wrong. I was trying to look up Kingdom Hearts (this happened when I was 9) and a website popped up and showed loads of research, everywhere. Explicit women... oh god it was disgusting I even shiver when I think about it years later.

I thought the default Windows Defender that comes with Windows 7 was a virus :L
It does look suspicious for some dumb reason.

I've used webroot Internet essentials for as long as I can remember. it's caught a lot of stuff.

I think it's about 30 dollars.