Rat
Not bored. Never bored.,
I actually can't think of the last time I opened a PDF on my home machine. But yes, it's obviously worth keeping Adobe software up to date, as with everything else.Zee drive by pdf attacks are still a problem.
I actually can't think of the last time I opened a PDF on my home machine. But yes, it's obviously worth keeping Adobe software up to date, as with everything else.Zee drive by pdf attacks are still a problem.
I actually can't think of the last time I opened a PDF on my home machine. But yes, it's obviously worth keeping Adobe software up to date, as with everything else.
I went for the more sensible option of ditching Norton in favour of just not clicking on executables from untrusted sources. Not a single virus since.
Yes. As long as you still have Windows Firewall (or another firewall program) running and you don't have your browser running, you shouldn't have any interim virus trouble in the time it takes to uninstall and reinstall.If I decide to ditch Norton, do I uninstall it before installing something else? Does that not leave my machine vulnerable in the interim? How long does such a changeover take?
And yet they never do.
Given Adobe's poor record of patching issues that's somewhat questionable.
Well, I have MSE on this machine, and it shows nothing detected in its history. I have up-to-date backups of everything important, so if I ever get any nontrivial infection on here I could just reload everything. But you did say that these infections will get me, so I'm interested to know when this is going to happen. It's been several years since I've had on-access AV, and absolutely nothing has happened.
Just FYI, in my limited experience the free version of AVG really really really slows down your machine.
Avast does not.
Again limited experience.
My experience of viruses is mainly on work machines where the principal vector is USB drives loaded with pirated videos being copied . Nultiuser machines are vulnerable to the weakest link. I've given up trying to keep them clean. It won't stop till someone gets fired.
Apart from that, I do wonder at people who say that Norton is worth using because it's not quite as awful as it used to be; that's a funny kind of logic. I wouldn't go buy a Yugo because people said it was a lot better than it used to be, I'd go buy a car magazine and start researching the best fit for my life. I'd get the Yugo if it fit, not because it was now up to par with the competition.
Why on earth does anyone pay for AV when there is free stuff that does the same thing? I really bump my brain against this one. If you need to drive to work and you have the choice of a free Yugo or an expensive Lada, why would you pick the Lada? Even if it was an expensive Porche, you'd still be a weirdo.
Ditch Norton and just go with Microsoft Security Essentials.
It's free and better than any other antivirus I've ever used.