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Decent free antivirus?

Free Anti-Virus You Would Recommend


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    33
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Windows Defender, or just Linux, you know, an OS that doesn't need 3rd party software to defend itself.
 
Only use Malwarebytes
 
Windows Defender, or just Linux, you know, an OS that doesn't need 3rd party software to defend itself.

Linux you say isn't affected by malware or Viri you sound like an Apple sales person

@OP if you don't wish to pay or put up with all the other crap that comes with "Free" Antivirus programs then just stick to Windows Defender
 
Just because it has something in the menu it doesn't mean it actuall yhas that installed. avast! Free is modular and while it shows "upsell" features in the interface, they are literally just a button that leads to "Buy" page. You can also strip it of most modules you don't need, leaving just essential protective modules.

I was just going to suggest exactly this. Just do a custom install and select minimal installation(though I add behavior scan and email scan back manually).

Also, you can get rid of most of the ad pop-ups by putting Avast in Silent Mode under settings.
 
Windows Defender hasn't let me down for years.
 
Malwarebytes Pro with lifetime license.

Can you link me the product page where you bought a lifetime Malwarebytes pro key please ? Im curious what that costs and when they began offering them. It sound more like a crack type activation when "lifetime" is used

nevermind , they dont sell 'em anymore.
 
All of these AV software have good and bad points. Overall, no matter what AV or operating system you have, practice being careful while online... No software/hardware can protect you if you are reckless... As a meme online I will quote: "This machine does not have a brain... Provide your own!"
 
It's not the the free stuff isn't good.... In the November test, Avast Free caught 99.9% of the "widespread and prevalent malware discovered in the last 4 weeks (the AV-TEST reference set)". That means that 11 viruses got thru. Once cleaned over 1200 infections out of a Defender / Essentials protected machine back in 2016 and it was back 3 months later with 670 more. Have had machines come in with all sorts of free and paid for stuff but they wouldn't be here, if they weren't infected. Ya can't fix stoopid and even the best get surprised on ocassion.

The free trials of Kaspersky or BD get most of them but once infected usually have to remove a few manually. But even in most recent test, Defender caught only 98.9% of 0-day malware attacks, inclusive of web and e-mail threats (**Real-World Testing**)", But like a medicine that helps 99 people and kills just one ... that's a pretty good performance record... unless you happen to be that one.

I usually clean them with a 30 day free trial of Kaspersky or BitDefender Suites and leave it up to the user to pay for the subscription ... usually about $5 - $7 a seat. Personally, I have too many seats to have to bother with manual upgrades and manual scan runs common with many freebies. We even gave up on BitDefender whan they switched to a model where eachs eat had to be downlaoded and managed from each box. If it comes back, dealt with that once, if you get infected again you are on your own. Have never had a box infected that I was responsible for administering in 26 years.

As for the testing, any test site that doesn't use **real world** testing isn't worth looking at They have a collection of visual in the wild, they install an OS, thy install the AV, they expose it to viruses. Just as important is false positives:

Windows Defender "False detections of legitimate software as malware during a system scan - November = 11 / December = 16)
"False blockages of certain actions carried out whilst installing and using legitimate software = 1


Industry average is 0 on both counts.

And performance impacts:

"Slower installation of frequently-used applications" November = 42% (26%) December = 54% (35%)" Industry averages in ( )

That being said, what you use should depend on the value of what's being protected. If it's a gaming box, not really anything there that can't be replaced and Defender is more than enough. If that's the only copy of 1,000s of family photos or 26 years of business records, might want to give up $7 a year. If using Defender, then if something gets by, ya can always download one of the free trials and hopefully get rid of it. Get hit again, well try the other one this time.

But for my money, If it saves me 3 minutes a year, it's cheaper to pay the site license.
 
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Window Defender or Sophos Home (Free)
 
windows defender is more than adequate unless you go looking for trouble
3d party av for the typical user case is dead died with windows xp, registry cleaners and other fudware non-sense
 
Linux you say isn't affected by malware or Viri you sound like an Apple sales person...

Stay in an updated kernel and that's it, don't stay on an old distro.
 
I was just going to suggest exactly this. Just do a custom install and select minimal installation(though I add behavior scan and email scan back manually).

Also, you can get rid of most of the ad pop-ups by putting Avast in Silent Mode under settings.

Per our request, they've included Behavior Shield intot he Minimal Installation. For some reason e-mail is not included, but I'd also recommend it even if you only use web based e-mail. If AV has Mail Shield module, it'll also be able to intercept spam bots easier. Everything else beyond these basic 4 shields is entirely optional, yes.
 
Stay in an updated kernel and that's it, don't stay on an old distro.
that's completely wrong & dangerous to tell others this false sense

heartbleed was the openssl package, stagefright was android's multimedia framework, every CVE in chromium is specifically the browser, the list goes on & on...

windows & osx have the exact same situation of apps/libraries having holes in them, windows simply has additional holes caused by users running as admin, apps having extra permissions (all or nothing), etc
 
+1 for Windows Defender in conjunction with Malwarebytes free
 
Windows Defender is ok if you are perfectly careful, know what you are doing 100% of the time, never missclick anything, pay enormous attention to what you open etc. Therefore might as well not use anything at all.
My dad had it, and incredibly high number of crap gets through. I've put Avira on his PC, and so far no issues.
So if you want an idiot-proof AV, do not use Windows Defender.
 
Yes ,if you find yourself wading through videos of dwarf horse porno, you may accidentally click a "bad link". but unless you do stuff like that online ,you're fine with just the basic stuff ,& common sense. Visiting sites with situations where you might accidentally click a bad link IS poor judgement, or lack of proper browsing habits, & also gross.
 
Per our request, they've included Behavior Shield intot he Minimal Installation. For some reason e-mail is not included, but I'd also recommend it even if you only use web based e-mail. If AV has Mail Shield module, it'll also be able to intercept spam bots easier. Everything else beyond these basic 4 shields is entirely optional, yes.

The free email shield is the reason I use Avast. It has intercepted Ransomware spam that Windows Defender let right though(and didn't even stop once it was run). I'm glad they made the behavior shield part of the minimal install now, so I only have to add one thing manually.

Yes ,if you find yourself wading through videos of dwarf horse porno, you may accidentally click a "bad link". but unless you do stuff like that online ,you're fine with just the basic stuff ,& common sense. Visiting sites with situations where you might accidentally click a bad link IS poor judgement, or lack of proper browsing habits, & also gross.

That isn't he major source of issues these days. Yes, for us enthusiasts that are a little smarter, we can usually weed out a BS email. But a lot of people are fooled by them.

So if you want an idiot-proof AV, do not use Windows Defender.

Yep, basically this. Windows Defender is the bare minimum of protection. It is like pulling out as birth control.
 
I'll try to talk to avast! guys why Mail Shield is not included in the minimal install. Would make more sense to have it as well, you'd just slam Minimal install and be done with it. Adding 1 extra tick is still annoying...

Btw, Windows Defender is a bit better than "pulling out". Imagine it as the cheapest condom you can buy which is still certified to do its job... :P
 
No love for Panda?

Love's gone here for Panda, when Windows Defender started covering all bases. But yes, did use the free cloud version, it was pretty solid, but also wasn't free of issues and you get a UI with clutter.

The best thing of it all is that WD even does better when it comes to false positives.
 
I'll try to talk to avast! guys why Mail Shield is not included in the minimal install. Would make more sense to have it as well, you'd just slam Minimal install and be done with it. Adding 1 extra tick is still annoying...

Btw, Windows Defender is a bit better than "pulling out". Imagine it as the cheapest condom you can buy which is still certified to do its job... :p

Nah, I'd say it is just a bit better than not and just praying. :D
 
Can you link me the product page where you bought a lifetime Malwarebytes pro key please ? Im curious what that costs and when they began offering them. It sound more like a crack type activation when "lifetime" is used

nevermind , they dont sell 'em anymore.

I bought mine many many years ago, I don't think they sell them anymore, it was only $15 at the time on Ebay. Got super lucky, haha This was before they had thought of the yearly pay scheme, haha
 
All of these AV software have good and bad points. Overall, no matter what AV or operating system you have, practice being careful while online... No software/hardware can protect you if you are reckless... As a meme online I will quote: "This machine does not have a brain... Provide your own!"
And there's no guarantee that in longer term maker of software doesn't do something stupid or highly annoying to user.
Like Avira once starting to nag about upgrading to commercial version every few hours.
Must have resulted in good number of uninstalls...
 
I bought mine many many years ago, I don't think they sell them anymore, it was only $15 at the time on Ebay. Got super lucky, haha This was before they had thought of the yearly pay scheme, haha

Yeah I had one too, but I made the mistake of not deactivating that key, before retiring the pc it was tied to, so it "went down with the ship" so to speak.

They used to sell lifetime keys during their early years to drum up attention in the computer security community for their product ,but in 2014 they stopped the lifetime key ,because they felt they had enough noteriety in the security community. Sometimes you can come across one now and again but more often than not there illegitimate

When they first got started, you could actually just search for a key on YouTube/google,and keep trying over and over again ,and out of 10 tries ,you'd get three keys that actually worked
 
Windows defender or bit defender. Both are not intrusive and you see no upgrade adds.
 
Yes ,if you find yourself wading through videos of dwarf horse porno, you may accidentally click a "bad link". but unless you do stuff like that online ,you're fine with just the basic stuff ,& common sense. Visiting sites with situations where you might accidentally click a bad link IS poor judgement, or lack of proper browsing habits, & also gross.
If you only visit stuff you've visited hundreds of times, and popular sites like YT, FB, News sites etc. then you don't need an AV at all.
 
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