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Post by stevepn on Jun 14, 2024 15:02:34 GMT
I am with Plusnet and have Norton which has been free for a number of years but now Norton want me to subscribe. Now I am possibly having to pay which is the best anti- virus around?
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Post by bracknellboy on Jun 14, 2024 15:20:55 GMT
I am with Plusnet and have Norton which has been free for a number of years but now Norton want me to subscribe. Now I am possibly having to pay which is the best anti- virus around? can't comment on "the Best". But With W11 I've just stuck with Defender. But then I've also gone with Edge as the browser.
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michaelc
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Post by michaelc on Jun 14, 2024 15:31:18 GMT
Kaspersky naturally....
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registerme
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Post by registerme on Jun 14, 2024 15:56:42 GMT
As with bracknellboy with Win 11 I don't bother using a third party AV solution. Defender seems to work well.
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adrianc
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Post by adrianc on Jun 14, 2024 16:15:34 GMT
DEFINITELY not Norton. Windows Defender is nowhere near as bad as it used to be, but I'm still not sure I'd trust it without anything else. I tend to put Avira free on people's machines. www.avira.com/en/free-antivirus-windows
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agent69
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Post by agent69 on Jun 14, 2024 16:21:56 GMT
which is the best anti- virus around? Go on then I'll bite
Pfizer?
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Post by batchoy on Jun 14, 2024 18:07:27 GMT
If you are running windows 11, then defender is good enough, though I do have professional rather than personal 365 licences which gives access to greater functionality and fortigate firewall. At work I ditched Kasperky due to its Russian connections when I migrated the company to the cloud in 2022 and switched completely to defender and run a combination fo physical and virtaul fortigate firewalls
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benaj
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Post by benaj on Jun 14, 2024 18:29:57 GMT
Interesting, it seems no one gives a damn about sophos premium. no patriotic support?
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Post by mostlywrong on Jun 14, 2024 18:47:33 GMT
I do not click on any link that looks as if it might be troublesome - which is most links...
I use Win10 and Defender on the machine that is connected to the internet.
I maintain regular backups of that OS and I keep them off-line.
I then run an off-line network which carries my sensitive data.
I hesitate to recommend a link (see my first comment) but this one is useful because it checks to see whether the ports on your computer and router that are accessible by the internet are locked down:
MW
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Post by mostlywrong on Jun 14, 2024 18:54:40 GMT
Whilst we are on the topic of computers and security...
If you use Hotmail/Outlook then you must ensure that you have a very strong password and 2 factor authentication switched on.
My account shows that someone, from wherever in the world - although Russia, Belarus, India and the USA all feature, tries to log in at least once an hour.
Surf safely...
MW
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iRobot
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Post by iRobot on Jun 14, 2024 20:13:26 GMT
Interesting, it seems no one gives a damn about sophos premium. no patriotic support? Not since being bought out by an American PE firm three or four years back. Can't afford to be overly sentimental - especially when it comes to (digital) security...
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iRobot
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Post by iRobot on Jun 14, 2024 20:35:00 GMT
Like others, I rely on a combination of Widows Defender + Common Sense. The first one is free. Unfortunately, the second one can come at the cost of 'learning-things-the-hard-way'. (It's not happened to me yet, but I'm conscious it's mostly a question of 'when' rather than 'if' - so, in some respects, the best form of defence against malware is a proper backup regime. If you don't already have it, you might want to consider not going for a paid-for AV solution and spend the money on some cloud storage, instead.) Back to AV, though, and AVLabs quarterly tests suggest most offerings they tested are much-of-a-muchness (just be aware that some are the 'corporate, all-bells-and-whistles-and-a-price-to-match' flavour).
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Post by overthehill on Jun 14, 2024 22:14:42 GMT
Used it forever after repair shop added it. It's only one line of defence.
Reboot your PC as Windows gets slower the longer you use it, reboot your router (wait 1 minute) to get assigned a different IP address.
At the slightest suspicion you've clicked on something dodgy or a P2P website or your keyboard is behaving strange, run a full manual scan using your virus software.
Always use a browser private window when using untrustworthy sites
Change your wifi password and router password from the default.
Turn off your router or wifi/mobile data/bluetooth on any device when you don't need it. I challenge any hacker when there is no network.
Put some gaffer tape over your webcam !
I've never bothered with full backups of data and software. I just backup all my data to an external disk and install Windows from scratch in the event of a problem.
Buy Dell, no failures in 20 years, they just get old and slow and retired (or to be exact sold on ebay for £50)
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michaelc
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Post by michaelc on Jun 14, 2024 22:43:50 GMT
Putting my serious hat on for a minute, I've always felt the threat isn't to my computer/phone/tablet/TV/etc. No, the threat is obtaining information from those devices or the usage of those devices. Yes I'd rather my hard drive on my PC wasn't reformatted against my will but the pales compared to a keylogger than captures enough information to allow a third party to log in to financial sites that I use and cost me money.
Therefore I want to know about anything on my devices that is sending data out across the internet potentially against my will. So on a PC I normally install personal firewall software that will alert me to anything that is sending data out of the ordinary. A good piece of software will know where e.g. Windows 11 processes typically connect to and not bother me. But if something starts sending data somewhere that hasn't been explicitly allowed by me, I want to know about it.
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adrianc
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Post by adrianc on Jun 15, 2024 8:19:27 GMT
reboot your router (wait 1 minute) to get assigned a different IP address. DHCP doesn't work like that. You'll simply renew the lease and get the same IP again. You'd need to leave the router off for an extended period (probably 24hr+) to be sure of a different IP... not that a different IP within the same range will make much difference to anything anyway. Leaving the router off for 48hr+ can have benefits if your ADSL has gone slow anyway - if the cabling is a bit iffy, it'll lose its remembered fault-sensing, and restart the learning process. As it learns, it ratchets the speed down until it finds a reliable speed.
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