Originally Posted By: JustinH
Still disagree with you guys.
In the enterprise environment we were running symantec endpoint, it is not very good. It is also hugely bloated. 1.5 GB in size.
We are now running ESET endpoint that is marginally better.
I think at home you want something not bloated and intrusive.
If you think a few percentage points of "testing" from one company to another is going to save your computer, you are wrong.
The most important thing for users is to change your habits and don't go clicking all kinds of unknown file installers.
That, or run your browsers in a sandboxed environment and just blast the computer back to stock with a snapshot. This way you don't have to run an AV client and you don't care.
The enterprise is going away from desktop computers all together, it will be VDI endpoints that we present a VM to, and we can put it back to stock in two seconds.
Anyone with a decent computer can run a linux VM on Oracle Virtualbox for free, and keep your windows PC pretty darn safe.
You guys can stick with your registry cleaners, and your defender that and this, keeping the OS sterile is the real answer.
JustinH, I try to stay away from the Computer Section because it is controlled by the Linux fans, but I can't resist commenting here and asking you some questions if you do not mind.
The post is about BitDefender and I always had problems with BitDefender. It always seemed buggy to me.
Anyway, Windows 10 will be out in about a month and a half and I can get it for free. What do you think about the security of Windows 10? I will probably use Windows Defender at first in Windows 10, until the AV companies catch up and their products are compatible. After they do become compatible, I will probably run ESET NOD32.
I don't know if device control will be available immediately and maybe it will not be available anyway to just ordinary users.
I was thinking about whitelisting of programs, device control if I can get it, bitlocker encryption, and Windows Defender if it is good enough and otherwise eventually ESET. I do not have experience running virtual machines but I understand that will be easier to do in Windows 10. Some malware can detect if they are in a virtual machine. I also like Malwarebytes Anti-malware (free version) and HitmanPro to back up Windows Defender. It is no longer necessary in Windows 10 to have to burn Windows Defender Offline to a CD. Only a few megabytes need to be downloaded. Windows Defender in Windows 10 will have much faster detection of zero day malware then in the past because of much quicker detection and analysis in the cloud.
Of course everything can be deep-sixthed by users who download junk. I will stick to known programs like Microsoft Office, Photoshop, Lightroom, Photodex Pro Show Gold (a Texas product by the way), Perfectly Clear plug in, possibly DXO Optic Pro, and the software and drivers for my Epson Photo printer and Epson scanner. After all of these programs are compatible with Windows 10 I will whitelist them if I can.
I am also considering fingerprint identification and perhaps facial identification for login. This is for a home computer.
Actually I should have put this in a PM and I will do so from now on.