Aces High Bulletin Board

General Forums => Hardware and Software => Topic started by: ACE on November 26, 2010, 08:00:23 AM

Title: Ant-Virus
Post by: ACE on November 26, 2010, 08:00:23 AM
Whats a good anti-virus program that i can run on my new computer when it gets here.  I'm using norton on this one and ppl say its terrible.
Title: Re: Ant-Virus
Post by: Hawk55 on November 26, 2010, 09:48:59 AM
I personally use ESET NOD32 and have for years.  Never had any issues. very easy to use and most importantly, is not a resource hog.  My 2 cents. Good luck with the new rig.   :salute
Title: Re: Ant-Virus
Post by: ColTomb on November 26, 2010, 10:25:29 AM
ESET smart security. It has the NOD32 antivirus AND firewall..Very game friendly. and as Hawk55 posts,not a resource hog.
Title: Re: Ant-Virus
Post by: The Fugitive on November 26, 2010, 10:29:44 AM
As a free one I use Avira. It's pretty good has updates and is free. I'm sure its not as good as ESET, but you have to pay for ESET. Also I'm pretty careful of where I "go" and what I "do" on my computer. If your careless or don't stay "on top of things" you might want to invest the money for ESET.
Title: Re: Ant-Virus
Post by: ACE on November 26, 2010, 12:20:28 PM
All I do on my computer is aceshigh forums and maybe facebook I want a good free anti virus.
Title: Re: Ant-Virus
Post by: gpwurzel on November 26, 2010, 01:07:56 PM
Maybe microsoft security essentials - just switched to that from AVG due to issues with avg. Not sure how good it is mind.


Wurzel
Title: Re: Ant-Virus
Post by: oneway on November 26, 2010, 03:13:28 PM
Personally I like Kaspersky...

It lets you terminate it with a simple right click and close from the tray.

ESet does not let you do that. Once running it is impossible to shut down...and behave like a virus itself.

Kaspersky also has a much smaller footprint than ESet.

Title: Re: Ant-Virus
Post by: fbWldcat on November 26, 2010, 03:24:02 PM
As always, I'll stand by Kaspersky, although I've tried others, Kaspersky is great.
Title: Re: Ant-Virus
Post by: TilDeath on November 26, 2010, 10:37:43 PM
Personally I like Kaspersky...

It lets you terminate it with a simple right click and close from the tray.

ESet does not let you do that. Once running it is impossible to shut down...and behave like a virus itself.

Kaspersky also has a much smaller footprint than ESet.


False statement.  You can right click the ESET icon in your tray and turn off one item at a time (firewall or AV or Real Time File protection) or the whole suite, the choice is yours.

Also  NOD32 is the ONLY AV software never to be penetrated by a wildfire release.  No other AV software can make this claim.  Kaspersky is the 6th most bypassed AV software out there 1) AVG 2) Panda 3) Trend Micro 4) McAfee 5) BitDefender 6) Kapersky and so on...

TD
Title: Re: Ant-Virus
Post by: Ghastly on November 26, 2010, 11:48:48 PM
False statement.  You can right click the ESET icon in your tray and turn off one item at a time (firewall or AV or Real Time File protection) or the whole suite, the choice is yours.

Also  NOD32 is the ONLY AV software never to be penetrated by a wildfire release.  No other AV software can make this claim.  Kaspersky is the 6th most bypassed AV software out there 1) AVG 2) Panda 3) Trend Micro 4) McAfee 5) BitDefender 6) Kapersky and so on...

TD

TD, I seem to remember this coming up before.  He (or whoever it was the first time if it wasn't him) wanted to TERMINATE the AV (i.e. no running processes) - not just disable it. And he's right - Eset does protect it's running processes, so you can disable it via the gui but if you try to terminate it you get "access denied".

Of course, given that most of the malware today actively attacks AV and Anti-Spam tools, in my opinion it's vital that my AV resist termination - but he sees it's resistance to termination as an objectionable action that makes it virus-like. I disagree as would anyone with sense but hey, everyone's entitled to their own opinion (even if it's wrong! ;)

<S>
Title: Re: Ant-Virus
Post by: JOACH1M on November 27, 2010, 12:36:47 AM
Be rolled with kaspersky for 2 years and works awsome
Title: Re: Ant-Virus
Post by: Dogtown on November 27, 2010, 07:07:29 PM
i have a similar problem...i have windows defender on my new rig ,,,,but my computer is telling me to get an antivirus program...Avira has recommended,,,do i need them both?
Title: Re: Ant-Virus
Post by: ACE on November 28, 2010, 08:39:18 PM
Anything out there thats free and good lol.
Title: Re: Ant-Virus
Post by: Ghastly on November 28, 2010, 09:07:32 PM
With the (possible) exception of the Microsoft Security Essentials, from my experience anything that's free is worth about what you pay for it.

<S>
Title: Re: Ant-Virus
Post by: maddafinga on November 28, 2010, 09:36:07 PM
Anything out there thats free and good lol.

I've used Avast for a good while and it is good.  Never had a complaint with it really.  Recently I switched to Eset security essentials and am extremely happy with it, anti virus and firewall, no complaints whatsoever.  If you don't want to pay the small amount for the Eset though, give Avast a try.
Title: Re: Ant-Virus
Post by: cattb on November 28, 2010, 10:22:08 PM
 I never turn my anti virus off. Should I lose frame rate for a short time for a update so be it.Just my opinion.

Title: Re: Ant-Virus
Post by: Chalenge on November 29, 2010, 01:11:26 AM
1) Use ESET NOD32.
2) Use a router that is secured by visiting https://www.grc.com/x/ne.dll?bh0bkyd2 (Shields UP!) and proceeding through the lock down.
3) Use the FREE account available at http://www.opendns.com/ (OpenDNS - follow directions!)

Malware?  :rofl
Title: Re: Ant-Virus
Post by: Ghastly on November 29, 2010, 11:04:53 AM
With the (possible) exception of the Microsoft Security Essentials, from my experience anything that's free is worth about what you pay for it.

<S>

Sorry, I just realized that I should have been more specific - I meant "free A/V for Windows platforms" .  There are many many free to use, free to try, and open source tools available that are every bit as good (or better!) than the commercial products, but A/V (on Windows) is one area where I don't feel that that is the case.

<S>
Title: Re: Ant-Virus
Post by: guncrasher on November 29, 2010, 01:42:00 PM
i have a similar problem...i have windows defender on my new rig ,,,,but my computer is telling me to get an antivirus program...Avira has recommended,,,do i need them both?

If you have win 7, these is a known bug. Security control sometimes doesn't pick it up.

Semp
Title: Re: Ant-Virus
Post by: gpwurzel on November 29, 2010, 01:57:56 PM
Windows Defender is not an antivirus per se, I'd suggest getting microsoft security essentials just to cover that particular gap (I used to use AVG, but the 2011 edition has been causing me issues).

Wurzel
Title: Re: Ant-Virus
Post by: Skuzzy on November 29, 2010, 01:59:24 PM
TD, I seem to remember this coming up before.  He (or whoever it was the first time if it wasn't him) wanted to TERMINATE the AV (i.e. no running processes) - not just disable it. And he's right - Eset does protect it's running processes, so you can disable it via the gui but if you try to terminate it you get "access denied".

Of course, given that most of the malware today actively attacks AV and Anti-Spam tools, in my opinion it's vital that my AV resist termination - but he sees it's resistance to termination as an objectionable action that makes it virus-like. I disagree as would anyone with sense but hey, everyone's entitled to their own opinion (even if it's wrong! ;)

<S>


Actually, ESET is being honest.  There is not a single anti-virus program on the market that can be disabled.  All you can do is stop the reporting being done.  When you exit any anti-virus program, the data is still being checked, it just does not do anything about it.

It is the nature of how the anti-virus programs hook into the operating system so as to not allow anything else to hijack them.

Disabling any anti-virus has the same result as closing the executable.