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Free or paid-for firewall?


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#1 OFFLINE   crzyallday

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Posted 18 August 2009 - 07:50 PM

I'm looking for firewall information. No idea if I should go for a free (free is always better) or a paid-for firewall. I'm the only one on the computer, do little shopping or surfing. Been researching and more confused than ever. Tried Comodo but found it very difficult to use so looking for one that is easy and I put the emphasis on easy. Also want one that doesn't slow the computer down. Read about leak prevention, don't have a clue what that is but it sounds bad. Also need to know if I need a software and hardware firewall. Read on one of the firewalls about a desktop security audit. Is that something I need too? Right now I have a free version of Sunbelt. Please help and thanks ahead of time. :huh:

#2 OFFLINE   Tom AZ

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Posted 18 August 2009 - 08:01 PM

I'd suggest Outpost Firewall Free. Highly rated and well respected.

#3 OFFLINE   Icedrake

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Posted 18 August 2009 - 08:04 PM

View PostTom AZ, on Aug 18 2009, 04:01 PM, said:

I'd suggest Outpost Firewall Free. Highly rated and well respected.
That's what I would recommend too. IMO, that's the best free firewall out there.
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#4 OFFLINE   Andavari

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Posted 19 August 2009 - 12:20 AM

Outpost Firewall Free, Sunbelt Personal Firewall Free, and ZoneAlarm Free are all good if you don't want to have a degree in setting up a firewall or don't have the patience.

For absolute complete newbies ZoneAlarm Free has to be the easiest to use in my opinion - sort of like the AOL of software-based firewalls.
Complexity of incoherent design.

#5 OFFLINE   Icedrake

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Posted 19 August 2009 - 12:44 AM

I've heard ZomeAlarm slows down the user's computer a lot of times.
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#6 OFFLINE   Tom AZ

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Posted 19 August 2009 - 01:20 AM

Outpost has an Auto-Learn Mode that you can engage for whatever period of time you think is necessary. During that time, everything is virtually "hands free." For most, a week should be more than adequate -- several people I know have used Auto-Learn for as little as 3-4 days. It works very well.

#7 OFFLINE   Andavari

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Posted 19 August 2009 - 04:50 AM

View PostTom AZ, on Aug 18 2009, 07:20 PM, said:

Outpost has an Auto-Learn Mode that you can engage for whatever period of time you think is necessary.
That Auto-Learn portion of Outpost Free has drawbacks though. It does make things very easy for the user to configure if opening every single program back to back for a quick configuration then of course disable it, and also super easy for malware to have full access to update itself.
Complexity of incoherent design.

#8 OFFLINE   hazelnut

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Posted 19 August 2009 - 05:15 AM

Also consider Online Armor free.

Good out of the box protection and ease of use.
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