Mitch Drumm wrote:Wiz:
Have you come up with any sane free alternatives to 8.0 or do you have any over-riding reason to avoid it?
Thanks.
At this time I am using Avira AntiVir, free edition. It pops up a giant ad every time it checks for definition updates. It regularly pops up generic virus warnings when I open my security tools downloads folder, even though I have added that directory to the Exceptions List (many security tools perform the same type of functions a virus might perform).
It regularly pops up a warning about exploit codes in emails I receive from security vendors, like Trend Micros's Malware Blog and others. It's offered solution is to delete the entire email folder in which that message is located. Each time I have to tell it to ignore the perceived threat, or even turn off the resident guard portion.
AVG 7.5 Free also gave false positives, but with no means of whitelisting them, and totally dragged down my system while running scheduled scans, so I will probably not go back to any of their products. I am fairly certain that my next anti-virus program will be a commercial one, not a free one. The threat landscape is changing too fast for freeware security apps to keep up, which is why there are so few to choose from. When a security software vendor gets nothing from its user-base, they can't afford to pay programmers to constantly keep it updated, as can commercial vendors.
I have been beta testing Trend Micro's Web Threat Protection Add-on for a couple of months and I am very happy with it. It has absolutely zero onboard definitions, getting all threat analysis details "in-the-cloud," from a constantly updated World-wide database of reporting computers and malware honeypots. It has blocked numerous dangerous web pages from loading in my browser, even though I am safe from infections. Because it doesn't have any simple override mechanism I am often unable to even view the face of the enemy when I want to, unless I switch identities to my admin account, turn off the Web Threat Protection Add-on, then log back into my limited account. The response time is instantaneous. It also has a means of detecting if you are botted and so notifies you. If you do try to visit an unsafe web page and TM blocks it, you are directed to visit their free Housecall online threat scanner.
With this level of security, and barely any load on the system, my next security application will probably carry the Trend Micro label and use in-the-cloud protection technology. Contact me if you want more details about Trend Micro security products.