Recommended Posts

I have windows firewall enabled but that doesn't allow you to block applications from calling home (as far as i'm aware)

Windows 7/Vista firewall have this functionality. Just type Windows Firewall with Advanced Security in the start menu. From this page make a new outbound rule (Right Pane) and simply choose to block the executable of your choice.

Hello,

A software-based application firewall can be useful for screening a notebook computer from attacks when it is connected to an untrusted network, such as a public Wi-Fi hotspot. Same with on a shared private network (dorm, home, etc.).

Regards,

Aryeh Goretsky

I saw Hawk say the same thing but I think it's one of his famous "Java is good" kinda joke again. :rolleyes:

Java is good ZA is not, never was. But then I stopped taking you serious about anything that has to do with code and such anyway since you obviously don't know what you're talking about. and still don't have any arguments beyond "it's bad".

Even back when XP didn't have a decent firewall, there was far better free alternatives, like Tiny.

Zonealarm tried to get extra market share by making several versions of the firewall with differnt added features like anti virus but lost their way in the process.Many years ago it was in my opinion one of the better free products but its just lost so much ground against the competition.

I don't understand why a lot of the so called 'experts' on Neowin seem to be fixated on advising people on using the half baked Windows 7 firewall or not having a firewall at all. By default, the WIndows 7 firewall allows all outbound traffic. You can set it to block outbound traffic but then you will have to manually create a rule for each and every application which you wish to allow access to the internet (talk about tedious). Most annoying of all is that it will not prompt you when a new program wants to establish an outgoing connection.

'Experts' of Neowin, please explain to me how your NAT gateway, your beloved MSE and half baked Windows 7 firewall at default settings will protect against unknown 0-day threats or driveby's from sending out your keystrokes or personal files to the attacker?

Hello,

A software-based application firewall can be useful for screening a notebook computer from attacks when it is connected to an untrusted network, such as a public Wi-Fi hotspot. Same with on a shared private network (dorm, home, etc.).

Regards,

Aryeh Goretsky

Wouldn't Windows' built-in firewall on an up-to-date installation do the job just fine in those situations? At our school and dorm network for example all clients are isolated and can't communicate with each other.

Perhaps someone didn't noticed that the latest version of ZA offers Kaspersky Antivirus for free?

Kaspersky has turned into trash itself. I used to buy a license for it, but quit using it about 3yrs ago. I use MSE and it has only failed me once. But that was my fault, I was beta testing release 2, instead of staying on the stable version.

'Experts' of Neowin, please explain to me how your NAT gateway, your beloved MSE and half baked Windows 7 firewall at default settings will protect against unknown 0-day threats or driveby's from sending out your keystrokes or personal files to the attacker?

That's the job of your AV and heuristics. firewalls are to protect from targeted attacks or remote attacks. at the point when outbund traffic matters, it's to late and the virus will, if it's a decent one, have disabled your FW anyway.

a FW has a purpose, it's not what you think it is.

  • Like 2

I don't understand why a lot of the so called 'experts' on Neowin seem to be fixated on advising people on using the half baked Windows 7 firewall or not having a firewall at all. By default, the WIndows 7 firewall allows all outbound traffic. You can set it to block outbound traffic but then you will have to manually create a rule for each and every application which you wish to allow access to the internet (talk about tedious). Most annoying of all is that it will not prompt you when a new program wants to establish an outgoing connection.

'Experts' of Neowin, please explain to me how your NAT gateway, your beloved MSE and half baked Windows 7 firewall at default settings will protect against unknown 0-day threats or driveby's from sending out your keystrokes or personal files to the attacker?

Where do I even begin to rebuttel this? Let me start with understanding nat and you do not. If you did you wouldn't have this argument.

Nat by default stops incoming attacks against your internal network. All routers do nat. Also many routers support other firewall attributes. Even corp firewalls do not get updates and what have you as often that these pos near useless "firewalls" do.

Your internal network is controlled by you and you allow what attaches to your network so therefore is secure against your neighbors for the most part anyway. I would be more concerned with someone breaking your wireless than someone getting into your network from the Internet.

Also, in case you didn't know, your pos router, that you have no faith in what so ever, has gotten attacked about 5000 times in the time it takes you to read this post. So even though you have absolutely no faith in it, it has done its job in protecting you better than you could have even imagined.

A software firewall is good for protecting you on unsecure networks like hotels, public hot spots, library networks, etc. But on secure networks they are nothing more than unnecessary overhead.

  • Like 3

That's the job of your AV and heuristics. firewalls are to protect from targeted attacks or remote attacks. at the point when outbund traffic matters, it's to late and the virus will, if it's a decent one, have disabled your FW anyway.

a FW has a purpose, it's not what you think it is.

Nothing is flawless including AV heuristics or software firewalls. The first thing a 0-day exploit will do is try to disable any security software on a target machine. If your AV and its self defence succumbs, at least firewall will block all outbound connections if **** hits the fan.

Yes, a software firewall has a purpose. I'd suggest you read up on them instead of making blanket statements

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Personal_firewall

ZA was pretty good back in the day. I would always recommend it along with Sygate and Comodo. But since ZA got brought out, it turned to ****. I think Sygate got brought out earlier too.

Only one that remains today is Comodo, but since the Windows 7 firewall is perfect. Kinda makes Comodo redundant.

ZA was pretty good back in the day. I would always recommend it along with Sygate and Comodo. But since ZA got brought out, it turned to ****. I think Sygate got brought out earlier too.

Only one that remains today is Comodo, but since the Windows 7 firewall is perfect. Kinda makes Comodo redundant.

Sygate was amazing. It's still a shame Symantec bought it and discontinued the free version completely.

Nothing is flawless including AV heuristics or software firewalls. The first thing a 0-day exploit will do is try to disable any security software on a target machine. If your AV and its self defence succumbs, at least firewall will block all outbound connections if **** hits the fan.

Yes, a software firewall has a purpose. I'd suggest you read up on them instead of making blanket statements

http://en.wikipedia....rsonal_firewall

:facepalm:

didn't read m post at all did you ?

Where do I even begin to rebuttel this? Let me start with understanding nat and you do not. If you did you wouldn't have this argument.

Nat by default stops incoming attacks against your internal network. All routers do nat. Also many routers support other firewall attributes. Even corp firewalls do not get updates and what have you as often that these pos near useless "firewalls" do.

Your internal network is controlled by you and you allow what attaches to your network so therefore is secure against your neighbors for the most part anyway. I would be more concerned with someone breaking your wireless than someone getting into your network from the Internet.

Also, in case you didn't know, your pos router, that you have no faith in what so ever, has gotten attacked about 5000 times in the time it takes you to read this post. So even though you have absolutely no faith in it, it has done its job in protecting you better than you could have even imagined.

A software firewall is good for protecting you on unsecure networks like hotels, public hot spots, library networks, etc. But on secure networks they are nothing more than unnecessary overhead.

NAT gateways stop incoming attacks, I think that's something we can agree on. A user instigates what comes in and goes out on a network, yes, but how will NAT help in a driveby malware attack where it goes under the radar of an AV's heuristics? Just so you know, malware does tend to call home.

As for firewalls being good for untrusted wireless networks, the average Neowinian with little knowledge in networking would assume simply running a firewall would protect them which is far from the truth. A software firewall is useless on untrusted networks unless you set it up to block all traffic apart from the port you are tunnelling on. Better advice would be to use a VPN instead.

Why can't you be content what you "think" and help the OP instead.

Has anyone ever thought for a second that if your computer is compromised wouldn't the software that is running in the os be compromised as well?

The way I look at it, if your computer is compromised it is already too late. Just because you get a warm and fuzzy that your software firewall is blocking all outbound communication don't believe it is. If anything that the earlier revisions of za taught me is don't believe it is disabled (because it isn't) and don't believe it is blocking things from communicating (because it isn't).

The only way to be sure is to block it on the hardware level. This has not gotten cheap enough, IMO, for the home network. You want to block outbound and know for sure what your network is doing get a firewall distro like pfsense, monowall, or smoothwall... Once your computer is compromised it is hard to know for sure that the software on it is 100% in tact.

Why don't you install Threat Management Gateway on each computer

I don't understand why a lot of the so called 'experts' on Neowin seem to be fixated on advising people on using the half baked Windows 7 firewall or not having a firewall at all. By default, the WIndows 7 firewall allows all outbound traffic. You can set it to block outbound traffic but then you will have to manually create a rule for each and every application which you wish to allow access to the internet (talk about tedious). Most annoying of all is that it will not prompt you when a new program wants to establish an outgoing connection.

'Experts' of Neowin, please explain to me how your NAT gateway, your beloved MSE and half baked Windows 7 firewall at default settings will protect against unknown 0-day threats or driveby's from sending out your keystrokes or personal files to the attacker?

Why don't you install Forefront TMG 2010 on each client computer that'll keep those nasty outbound connections at bay./s

Overkill much ? centralize all this at the edge firewall.

Not used a software firewall since the basic one introduced with XP SP2, and never been remotely hacked. Almost every ISP will supply you with a router these days and I've always found that works just fine.

NAT gateways stop incoming attacks, I think that's something we can agree on. A user instigates what comes in and goes out on a network, yes, but how will NAT help in a driveby malware attack where it goes under the radar of an AV's heuristics? Just so you know, malware does tend to call home.

As for firewalls being good for untrusted wireless networks, the average Neowinian with little knowledge in networking would assume simply running a firewall would protect them which is far from the truth. A software firewall is useless on untrusted networks unless you set it up to block all traffic apart from the port you are tunnelling on. Better advice would be to use a VPN instead.

Why can't you be content what you "think" and help the OP instead.

I am fully aware that they call home and do not rely on a infected system to tell me that it is communicating out.

A software firewall useless on an untrusted network? Wow this is funny....you clearly have absolutely no clue about anything. This made me chuckle a bit. Please tell me more.....The software firewall bocks communication from anything outside of the computer by default. No other configuration needed. You need to create rules to allow communication with other network computers. Even the windows firewall wants to believe everything other than the host pc is hostile. I am not even touching the VPN comment, it doesn't belong in this convo.

I am fully aware that they call home and do not rely on a infected system to tell me that it is communicating out.

A software firewall useless on an untrusted network? Wow this is funny....you clearly have absolutely no clue about anything. This made me chuckle a bit. Please tell me more.....The software firewall bocks communication from anything outside of the computer by default. No other configuration needed. You need to create rules to allow communication with other network computers. Even the windows firewall wants to believe everything other than the host pc is hostile. I am not even touching the VPN comment, it doesn't belong in this convo.

The irony is that one of his replies(in fact the one to me where I brought up that exact issue) is that viruses will disable your security systems so you need your software firewall to protect you ... which isn't it's purpose in the first place, and somehow it magically didn't get deactivated, which is even more interesting since most software firewalls allows local software to self allow themselves without malicious intent, and as malicious software it would most certainly disable both AV and FW among other systems.

heck even non call home malware and bad ware I clean from clients computers usually have any firewall completely disabled or usually broken. it's far more common for malware to break the firewall than the AV which is often just disabled.

This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Posts

    • Calibre 9.10 by Razvan Serea  Calibre is an open source e-book library management application that enables you to manage your e-book collection, convert e-books between different formats, synchronize with popular e-book reader devices, and read your e-books with the included viewer. It acts as an e-library and also allows for format conversion, news feeds to e-book conversion, as well as e-book reader sync features and an integrated e-book viewer. Calibre's features include: library management; format conversion (all major ebook formats); syncing to e-book reader devices; fetching news from the Web and converting it into ebook form; viewing many different e-book formats, giving you access to your book collection over the internet using just a browser. Calibre 9.10 changelog: New features Content server: A new "modern" interface with a sidebar to ease navigation Content server: When used with HTTPS allow installation as a PWA (Progressive Web App) Edit book: Saved searches: When filtering the list of saved searches match by keywords CSS parsing: Add support for CSS Level 4 selectors Cover grid: When using an image larger than the viewport as a texture scale it to fit the viewport Annotations browser: Allow restricting displayed annotations by custom annotation styles as well Edit book: Compress images: Add option to convert PNG images to JPEG or WEBP Bug fixes E-book viewer: Fix IME on Windows not working when typing in notes for highlights Conversion: Heuristics: Improve performance in some pathological cases SNB Input: Fix error on some input files Windows: fix rare crash when too many notifications are displayed at once Fix duplicating of books not duplicating value from enumerated columns when the column has a default value defined Fix a regression in 9.8 that caused errors from AI plugin providers to be silently swallowed and not displayed to user Fix CSV export invalid when exporting comments field Disallow Python templates when reading book metadata (CVE-2026-53511) Improved news sources The Week Economist Espresso Horizons Download: Calibre 9.10 | Portable | ~200.0 MB (Open Source) Download: Calibre for MacOS | 327.0 MB Download: Calibre for Linux View: Calibre Home Page | Calibre Screenshot Get alerted to all of our Software updates on Twitter at @NeowinSoftware
    • Malwarebytes Anti-Malware 5.6.1.257 by Razvan Serea Malwarebytes is a high performance anti-malware application that thoroughly removes even the most advanced malware and spyware. Malwarebytes version 5.**** brings comprehensive protection against today’s threat landscape so that you can finally replace your traditional antivirus. You can finally replace your traditional antivirus, thanks to a innovative and layered approach to prevent malware infections using a healthy combination of proactive and signature-less technologies. While signatures are still effective against threats like potentially unwanted programs, the majority of malware detection events already come from signature-less technologies like Malwarebytes Anti-Exploit and Malwarebytes Anti-Ransomware; that trend will only continue to grow. For many of you, this is something you already know, since over 50% of the users already run Malwarebytes as their sole security software, without any third-party antivirus. What's new in Malwarebytes 5.****: Unified user experience - For the first time, Malwarebytes now provides a consistent experience across all of our desktop and mobile products courtesy of an all new and reimagined user experience powered by a faster and more responsive UI all managed through an intuitive dashboard. Modern security and privacy integrations - Antivirus and ultra-fast VPN come together seamlessly in one easy-to-use solution. Whether you’re looking for a next-gen VPN to secure your online activity, or harnessing the power of Browser Guard to block ad trackers and scam sites, taking charge of your privacy is simple. Trusted Advisor - Empowers you with real-time insights, easy-to-read protection score and expert guidance that puts you in control over your security and privacy. Malwarebytes 5.6.1.257 changelog: Features and improvements Updated the sign-in section of the My Subscription page to clarify that users can activate their subscription by signing in with their Malwarebytes account. Updated the uninstall flow to collect more meaningful insights and address customer concerns. Refreshed the app's tutorial layout for a better look and feel. Issues fixed Fixed an outdated link when clicking Take action after running a Digital Footprint Scan. Miscellaneous bug fixes. Download: Malwarebytes 5.6.1.257 | 472.0 MB (Free, paid upgrade available) Links: Malwarebytes Website | Screenshot Get alerted to all of our Software updates on Twitter at @NeowinSoftware
    • Yep, not sure where the surprise is here. They release a new model for every phone, every year
    • AI would probably be better utilised replacing Executives than Engineers.
    • RapidRAW 1.5.8 by Razvan Serea RapidRAW is a beautiful, non-destructive, GPU‑accelerated RAW image editor designed for speed and simplicity. It uses a lightweight (~30 MB), efficient code base built with Rust, React and Tauri. Ideal for Lightroom workflows, it offers rich editing tools—exposure, contrast, highlights, shadows, whites/blacks, tone curves, HSL mixer, dehaze, vignetting, film grain, sharpening, clarity and noise reduction—processed in real-time on the GPU. Features include intuitive masking (brush, linear, radial, AI-powered subject and foreground detection), generative edit layers (via ComfyUI), 32‑bit precision, and full RAW format support through rawler. RapidRAW also provides library management (folder navigation, ratings, metadata, EXIF viewer), batch operations, export presets (JPEG/PNG/TIFF), sidecar editing (.rrdata), undo/redo history, customizable UI themes, smooth animations, resizable panels, and preset copy/paste. A modern high-performance Lightroom alternative with polished UX and creative tools, RapidRAW brings powerful photo editing to photographers seeking speed, responsive GPU feedback, and streamlined workflows. RapidRAW v1.5.8 release notes: This release introduces several new editing tools and workflow refinements designed to improve both photo editing and library management. It expands creative flexibility with the addition of a preset intensity slider and a global hue adjustment, while also introducing convenient navigation features such as quick bottom bar filters and folder sorting. Behind the scenes, the update addresses background indexing issues and ensures folder image counts are updated correctly. It also broadens accessibility by adding support for Korean and Traditional Chinese. [full changelog] Download: RapidRAW 1.5.8 | ARM64 | ~20.0 MB (Open Source) View: RapidRAW Home Page | Screenshot | Other operating systems Get alerted to all of our Software updates on Twitter at @NeowinSoftware
  • Recent Achievements

    • Week One Done
      xvvxcvv earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • One Month Later
      xvvxcvv earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • Enthusiast
      Xonos went up a rank
      Enthusiast
    • Conversation Starter
      Admir earned a badge
      Conversation Starter
    • First Post
      The_Focal_Point earned a badge
      First Post
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      405
    2. 2
      +Edouard
      168
    3. 3
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      129
    4. 4
      neufuse
      69
    5. 5
      Xenon
      68
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!