tgr42
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- Jul 31, 2012
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The AV industry has fooled (almost) everyone into thinking that their software is effective in defending against malware and viruses. What do you think is more dangerous: the malware/viruses themselves, or the AV software that makes people think they are safe while not actually protecting them from most threats out there and screwing up their machines?Depends on the anti-virus/anti-malware package...netbooks aren't exactly given the best hardware, so depending on what you run, I can see resources being an issue.
Also, safe computing practices alone won't save you from the fact that if a normally mundane website you goto often gets hijacked, it can spread malware/viruses.
So, trying to stay safe is no substitute for having a proper package for AV.
The answer isn't one or the other, it's both. Protect yourself with the software and try to avoid putting yourself in the situation to need it in the first place.
which circles back to the issue where a netbook will lose a chunk of its resources to protecting itself, especially if you're using anything as bloated as most of the major packages (like norton.
Anyway there is (relatively) lightweight AV and anti-malware software out there. In Windows 8, it's built-in with no action required from the end user. In Windows RT, things are supposed to be locked down enough that this sort of software is unnecessary, right? But will it be immune from attack? We shall see. I would expect it to depend primarily on the popularity it's able to achieve.