jmshub
Moderator
These days, I just use Microsoft Security Essentials / Windows Defender. The last antivirus I paid for was NOD32. It was very lightweight and stayed out of my way. I can recommend it.
I can't find it now, but I read an article from one of the respected sources a few weeks ago that rated the top 20 or 30 anti-malware products. It was a source that made their determinations through actual testing, not by the gut feelings of people who said, "I always use such and such and I've never been infected." I read it with interest because currently on my SP3 I'm just running Windows Defender.
While I don't remember the whole list, I did make note that Kaspersky was listed as number one. That's what I'm running on my server at home, as well as my entertainment PC, and both of my wife's PCs. I've used Kaspersky for at least 5 or 6 years, and I think longer than that, and cannot recall having been infected once while running it.
I want to say that Windows Defender was somewhere around 4 or 6 on the list.
Yup.It's looking like Windows Defender is a much better option than the urban myth journalists would have us believe.
Yeah... Most anyone involved in IT in any capacity would tell you to avoid McAfee or Norton/Symantec with every fiber of your being. I'm one of those guys. :wink:I've got McAfee on all our PCs (included with our AT&T internet subscription so it costs nothing), but given the memory overhead as well as the much lower rating, I'm rethinking that.
I can't find it now, but I read an article from one of the respected sources a few weeks ago that rated the top 20 or 30 anti-malware products. It was a source that made their determinations through actual testing, not by the gut feelings of people who said, "I always use such and such and I've never been infected." I read it with interest because currently on my SP3 I'm just running Windows Defender.
While I don't remember the whole list, I did make note that Kaspersky was listed as number one. That's what I'm running on my server at home, as well as my entertainment PC, and both of my wife's PCs. I've used Kaspersky for at least 5 or 6 years, and I think longer than that, and cannot recall having been infected once while running it.
I want to say that Windows Defender was somewhere around 4 or 6 on the list.
Let me say that the reason I'm not running Kaspersky on my SP3 is because way back when Win8 was still in developer preview, or maybe it was right when Win8 had come out, I'd installed Kaspersky and it prevented my Windows Phone emulators from running, so I uninstalled it. Since then I've had an SP2 and an SP3, and I've just never tried installing Kaspersky again to see if they resolved that issue. Since I've been completely malware-free running Windows Defender, I didn't see the need to install Kaspersky again.
The most important thing to remember is that there is no anti-malware tool that will catch every bit of malware out there. It is important to use an anti-malware mentality when using a computer. Don't open attachments in email that you aren't expecting. Make sure the website you are entering info into is actually the website you think it is. Stay away from sites of the type that are more likely to try to install malware. You get the idea. Here's a link with some tips:
How to browse the internet safely in eight simple steps | AVG Blogs
This doesn't bust my bubble. The majority of what you'll find online about Kaspersky is just the opposite, which would suggest that there is a different problem.I don't mean to burst your bubble, I had a less than an enlightening experience with Kaspersky and have seen infected machines with kaspersky up to date. The other annoying behaviour is that kaspersky takes up insane amount of resources when it comes closer to renewal, thus completely grinding everything to a halt.
This behaviour was exhibited not once but with every single iteration of kaspersky that was installed on almost every machine starting from the version that was running before i started working in that office. Unfortunately they were running XP so I cannot say if the same would occur on windows 7 and higher. IT had better machines running windows 7 and they all swore by it, I listened to what they said with respect until the day they started upgrading all machines to 8gb ram running windows xp 32bit adamant it was money well spent and would speed up the machines greatly... LOL.
To the OP like others and what Hopmedic said what really counts is your browsing habits and if you start opening up random attachments from emails. The worst culprit from the latter is what may look like an email from someone you know but in reality their account has been hacked and emails have been sent (my yahoo got hacked, I only knew when they sent an email to another email that I used and was saved in the address book). The most common indicator is gibberish emails containing spurious links, if that doesn't set someone's alarm bells ringing then I don't know what to say. :winktongue:
MS sales rep who sold me my SP3 recommended Kapersky because it was the least resource intensive.
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Aside from Microsoft's built-in antimalware, any recommendations for security software for my SP3 that's not going to kill my battery?
No offense but I would love to know what that rep was smoking. Kaspersky's products are the most resource intensive and famously buggy. That is the one product line I would never recommend any machine.
I've been hunting for the same article. Microsoft's built-in Defender software was rated very highly because they are alerted to malicious code that makes PCs go wonky much quicker than 3rd parties that must rely on user reports or willingness to give them feedback (very limited).
No offense taken...just repeating what he told me. He advised against just relying on Windows Defender alone, and advised against McAffee.
Posted via the WPC App for Android on BlackBerry Z30
Sometimes you lot scare me with your lack of knowledge of the subject.
Read, learn, inwardly digest. Windows built-in is rated worst for detection, blocking etc. Kaspersky, BitDefender, Panda, AVIRA and Emsisoft are rated as the top 5 packages. Windows built-in is rated as the lowest.
No offense but I would love to know what that rep was smoking. Kaspersky's products are the most resource intensive and famously buggy. That is the one product line I would never recommend any machine.
You're right, it IS rated very highly.
Really??? You're going to battle facts from a recent article by linking to articles that are more than a year old???