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Anti Malware setup


ishan_rulz

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Instead of knowing what AV you use, I'd like to know what is the entire setup you have running on your system, what all softwares do you use to keep yourself protected?

 

ESET Smart Security

SpywareBlaster

MalwareBytes Anti-Malware

Firefox + Adblock

Simplicity is hard.

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Operating Sys: Win XP home

 

Antivirus: Avast 6.0.1125 Home Page, Download at Filehippo

Other Antimalaware apps:

- SpywareGuard

- SpywareBlaster

System Backup Apps:

- Acronis. Not free, but you can find a deal sometimes. Home Page.

- Most here like Macrium Reflect, there is a Free and a PAID version.

System virtualization apps:

- Sandboxie at Filehippo.

- PowerShadow. Info and download HERE and HERE. Was free, may still be.

My favorite of all, but only works for W 2K, W XP, and W 2003. They said they will release a version for Vista and W 7, but have not done it yet. Any changes to your system are gone when you restart.

The CCleaner SLIM version is always released a bit after any new version; when it is it will be HERE :-)

Pssssst: ... It isn't really a cloud. Its a bunch of big, giant servers.

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Good mention of the system imaging software login123.;) I forgot all about that, and the handful of times Macrium Reflect has literally saved my Windows installation over the past 1 1/2 years.

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I do tend to change software quite a bit as I like to test things out. So at the moment, on this XP machine I have

 

Vipre AV (won in a competition)

Malwarebytes Free

OA Premium (I'm a tester for it)

Sandboxie paid

FD-ISR an instant restore program now no longer available, for recovering from system screw ups.

 

On Win7 laptop I have

 

MSE

Prevx (won in competition)

Malwarebytes

Sandboxie paid (one license is for life and all machines you have in house)

Win 7 firewall

Win7 image + a Macrium one as well.

 

Support contact

https://support.ccleaner.com/s/contact-form?language=en_US&form=general

or

support@ccleaner.com

 

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Well, thanks, Andavari. Big advantage for members is yours and DennisD's expertise using Macrium. I got Acronis for $10 during a promotion, so still use it, not expert at it, though.

The CCleaner SLIM version is always released a bit after any new version; when it is it will be HERE :-)

Pssssst: ... It isn't really a cloud. Its a bunch of big, giant servers.

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...

Win7 image + a Macrium one as well.

 

Good news...Macrium for win 7. Does it work smoothly?

The CCleaner SLIM version is always released a bit after any new version; when it is it will be HERE :-)

Pssssst: ... It isn't really a cloud. Its a bunch of big, giant servers.

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Good mention of the system imaging software login123.;) I forgot all about that, and the handful of times Macrium Reflect has literally saved my Windows installation over the past 1 1/2 years.

Andavari, have you ever had to use Macrium for a "full image" restore. If so, just wondering how smoothly that went?

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Andavari, have you ever had to use Macrium for a "full image" restore. If so, just wondering how smoothly that went?

I use the free edition and I've did about 5 total restores using it so far, and every time it restored my system flawlessly. Of course I always verify an image after it creates it, and also have it verify during the restore operation. I also religiously follow DennisD's advice of testing out the Macrium Rescue CD to make sure it works!!!!!

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Good news...Macrium for win 7. Does it work smoothly?

Macrium works perfectly on my Win7 Ultimate + SP1

 

It takes 150 Seconds each night to make an Incremental Image file of my entire Primary HDD,

or 240 seconds for the occasional FULL image of the entire Primary, which holds 17 GB in System Reserved:\ + C:\ + D:\ + H:\

 

After finding where the wife tidied away the Boot CD,

it takes perhaps 5 minutes to restore the Entire HDD.

Restoration has never faltered for me.

 

Twice in the last few months Windows updates sneaked through without permission and trashed Windows.

The first time I was not doing nightly backups and and I lost a few days of new desktop links to applications in H:\ and several new applications in H:\

The boot CD allowed me to create an image of my trashed C:\ as evidence of what the update did to me, and then restored C:\

Then using my restore earlier version of C:\ :-

I used Macrium to mount as P:\ the image file of trashed C:\

I used the Portable Sync utility BestSync to compare C:\ with P:\,

and then synchronise/update all the newer P:\ desktop links to the older/current C:\.

I was surprised at how easy life had become.

 

Incidentally mounting and dismounting a Macrium image is very much easier and faster than with Acronis,

and Every time I used Acronis to mount an image it never wanted to unmount it,

and when it did unmount the System Event log would then complain about FTDisk errors.

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I use Security Essentials and browse with firefox. I don't really do anything that would catch me a virus anyway.

I do have a back up of a clean Windows 7 install that I did with the built in back up, but I don't really know how good it is.(its got only office 07 installed on it, no drivers, or other software). I figure if it works than great, if not than oh well.

 

I haven't played with the image back ups much. What I generally do is just drag a copy of my "My documents" folder over to an external drive every now and then. I think the reason I don't like the idea of an image back up is that if I was going to do a system restore I want to download all the newest drivers, software, ect. without starting out with old versions installed, thus quickly cluttering up a "new" install.

 

I did clean installs on my windows 7 machine about 5 times because of a driver bug I was having when it was first released.(something where icons wouldn't show on my desktop when I put them there, files, folders, nothing would show). When I did those reinstalls it maybe took me 3 hours to do the reinstall, update, and then drag over my files.

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Guest Shane0500

Avast! Free Antivirus

Windows Firewall (XP SP2)

 

I do not use any third party on-demand scanners

 

When I get Win7 soon, ill have

MSE

Online Armor Free

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When I did those reinstalls it maybe took me 3 hours to do the reinstall, update, and then drag over my files.

I'll never go that route again if it can be avoided. With my Macrium Reflect backups it restores my system in about 30-40 minutes, of course with a few updates to do afterwords such as antivirus definitions. I try not to let my main backup image get anymore than one month old, while I do have two other if all else fails backups on DVD+R discs.

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Kerio Personal Firewall, System Safety Monitor (HIPS), Virtual Box running XP or Linux (Sandbox protection for safe browsing and testing software) with snapshot mode to provide instant roll back, A/V: MBAM, McAfee Stinger, AVG (install, scan, uninstall).

 

Richard S.

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I try not to let my main backup image get anymore than one month old, while I do have two other if all else fails backups on DVD+R discs.

 

After doing a Macrium Reflect restore just 9 weeks ago (all went well as expected - other than having to perform the odd SW updates as you did), I now do the Macrium Reflect backup every Sunday...peace of mind........I just love Macrium Reflect. :D

Always With Kind Regards

Tasgandy

"one is never too old to listen & learn"

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  • 4 weeks later...

Here's what I use:

 

Avast! Anti-Virus - Main Defense against Viruses.

Malwarebytes Anti-Malware - Secondary Protection. Run this about every 2 weeks or so.

Superantispyware - Main Anti-spyware solution I use. It's very dependable and finds things that Malwarebytes might miss (along with Avast).

Spybot Search and Destroy - Secondary. I usually just update the database for protection against spyware. I scan it too ab out the same time as SAS

Comodo Firewall - Just the firewall, I don't use the other features. Works fine.

 

Have not had virus issues since I was about 18 or so. Bi-weekly maintenance takes care of that (I am overdue for that now as we speak lol).

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If you are running XP, you can use Microsoft's Steady State program.

 

Users can revert all changes on reboot.

Stops add on toolbars, malware, any system changes.

 

Any change is allowed till reboot, then you have the option of saving or rejecting.

If you reject, the system is restored to exactly like it was before you downloaded/installed/changed anything.

 

Of course, if you save something, it should be sent to an external drive, anyway.

This is sometimes better than an antivirus, because since no application can make changes without your permission, it is like an OS level sandboxing.

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If you are running XP, you can use Microsoft's Steady State program.

 

 

Windows SteadyState will be phased out effective December 31, 2010. Microsoft will no longer support Windows SteadyState after June 30, 2011.

 

http://support.microsoft.com/kb/2390706

 

Support contact

https://support.ccleaner.com/s/contact-form?language=en_US&form=general

or

support@ccleaner.com

 

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Let's see...

 

I am trying to think why software would just die if Microsoft doesn't "support" it.

I know security updates are important, but all steady state does is block all changes.

 

Why would that need to be "supported"? Steady state hasn't been changed at all in years.

I could see if this was an application that needed updating, but it isn't.

 

After all, CCleaner isn't supported by Microsoft. It is by piriform. If software magically stops working unless it is Microsoft official software, that throws out Firefox, CCleaner, Defraggler, Recuva, Ubuntu, Open Office, & noone will ever have anything!

 

I'm not trying to complain really, but I was wondering why the sad face over this?

Why would steady state need updating, when it 100% blocks all changes if the user chooses?

 

Just curious... Really appreciate your response. Thanks!

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Earlier today I switched my resident antivirus from Microsoft Security Essentials to Panda Cloud Antivirus Free to give it a good thorough test.

 

So far it's been really good, and doesn't exhibit the major bug it had in the previous version of causing virtual memory to fill up and complain with an error report in the SysTray. As far as a full system scan goes Panda Cloud Antivirus Free is on par with Microsoft Security Essentials full system scanning speed which isn't great at just over 1 hour on WinXP however it's definitely a vast improvement compared to the last version being over 3 hours.

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