• 0

Definitive Best PAID Antivirus 2017


Definitive Best PAID Antivirus 2017  

102 members have voted

  1. 1. Which do you choose?

    • Avast! Pro/Internet Security
    • AVG Antivirus PRO/Internet Security
    • Avira Antivirus Premium/Pro/Endpoint
    • BitDefender Anti-Virus/Internet Security/Total Security
    • Comodo Endpoint Security/Internet Security Pro
      0
    • Dr. Web Anti-Virus/Security Space
      0
    • Emsisoft Anti-Malware/Internet Security
    • ESET NOD32/Smart Security/Endpoint Security
    • F-Secure
    • Kaspersky Anti-Virus
    • MalwareBytes Anti-Malware PRO
    • McAfee Antivirus
      0
    • Panda Antivirus/Internet Security
    • Secureaplus
    • Sophos Endpoint
    • Symantec/PC Tools/Norton
    • Trend Micro Anti-Virus/Internet Security
    • Vipre Antivirus
      0
    • Webroot SecureAnywhere Antivirus
    • ZoneAlarm Pro
      0
    • Other (please specify below)


Question

It's a new year, and so we have a new poll for Definitive Best Paid Antivirus.The 2016 thread can be found here.


This is a poll for best PAID antivirus software. There is a separate thread for FREE antivirus software here
 
If your choice of paid antivirus software is not listed, please choose Other and specify in the comments.

Link to comment
https://www.neowin.net/forum/topic/1317868-definitive-best-paid-antivirus-2017/
Share on other sites

Recommended Posts

  • 0

I think most will post simply what they have use without any actual testing or knowledge. Over the years, I have loved doing tests of many for cleaning and prevention. While I have NOT tested out all of the above mentioned names (as well as not doing a wide test for a couple years), Malwarebytes USED to be always top dog in any tests that I performed vs others like Panda, Norton, Macafee, Avast, AVG, Bit defender, Fsecure etc etc. For this reason, I still use Malwarebytes (and have for the last 7 years).

  • 0
8 minutes ago, Rippleman said:

I think most will post simply what they have use without any actual testing or knowledge. Over the years, I have loved doing tests of many for cleaning and prevention. While I have NOT tested out all of the above mentioned names (as well as not doing a wide test for a couple years), Malwarebytes USED to be always top dog in any tests that I performed vs others like Panda, Norton, Macafee, Avast, AVG, Bit defender, Fsecure etc etc. For this reason, I still use Malwarebytes (and have for the last 7 years).

MalwareBytes until their latest release did not have Anti-Virus Protection.

  • 0
17 minutes ago, Gary7 said:

MalwareBytes until their latest release did not have Anti-Virus Protection.

Always a cool story when you/anyone says that, but it always "cleaned" up what other "antivirus" programs couldn't see and/or couldn't remove in ALL tests. Reversely, no protection suite I tested could ever find anything AFTER cleaning with MB. 

Disclaimer: Yes, perhaps I didn't get the "right" infections, however, the infections that I did get are standard files from websites, junk sites, warez sites, porn sites, hack sites, fake AV installs, fake patches, fake programs, bit torrent viruses etc etc etc, which would be what 99% of people would be subject to. 

Edited by Rippleman
  • Like 2
  • 0
1 hour ago, Rippleman said:

Always a cool story when you/anyone says that, but it always "cleaned" up what other "antivirus" programs couldn't see and/or couldn't remove in ALL tests. Reversely, no protection suite I tested could ever find anything AFTER cleaning with MB.

Not a story friend it is a fact. I use MBAM and have since it came out. It does pick up malware and PUPS but I would never use it as a single source of Protection, but that is me YMMV.

  • 0
1 hour ago, Gary7 said:

Not a story friend it is a fact. I use MBAM and have since it came out. It does pick up malware and PUPS but I would never use it as a single source of Protection, but that is me YMMV.

What I said is also fact. As much as you claim it doesn't pick up viruses, what ever MB called them it did and did very well (according to all other "virus" scanners (i guess all the other protection suites are lying :) ) And I agree, never rely on just one. I used Avira for a backup scanner -which was never needed. 

  • 0
Just now, Rippleman said:

What I said is also fact. As much as you claim it doesn't pick up viruses, it did and did very well (according to all other "virus" scanners (i guess all the other protection suites are lying :) ) And I agree, never rely on just one. I used Avira for a backup scanner -which was never needed. 

Seven years ago MBAM did not pick up Viruses. It is a great secondary program. I am not disputing that. It was never marketed as an Anti Virus Program.

  • 0
28 minutes ago, Gary7 said:

Seven years ago MBAM did not pick up Viruses. It is a great secondary program. I am not disputing that. It was never marketed as an Anti Virus Program.

Lets  recap just so they was can be perfectly clear. 

 

Fact: MB was not marketed as an avtivirus. Check.

 

Fact: It removed any viruses it found that other suites missed/could not/would not/ and identified.

 

If you are into testing and wish to see for yourself, you can download old versions of MB and try. It appears you may be shocked by the findings. 

  • 0
6 minutes ago, Rippleman said:

Lets  recap just so they was can be perfectly clear. 

 

Fact: MB was not marketed as an avtivirus. Check.

 

Fact: It removed any viruses it found that other suites missed/could not/would not/ and identified.

 

If you are into testing and wish to see for yourself, you can download old versions of MB and try. It appears you may be shocked by the findings. 

It was named Malware---Bytes for a reason.. I posted I used it for as long as I remember!

All-In-One Anti-Malware

 

http://www.majorgeeks.com/mg/sortname/all_in_one_malware_removal_suites.html

 

Capture.PNG

 

Antivirus

http://www.majorgeeks.com/mg/sortname/all_in_one_anti_virus_suites.html

 

MajorGeeks has it wrong then as they say it is anti-Malware and they are not referring to Chameleon and neither was I:)///

 

  • 0
1 hour ago, Gary7 said:

It was named Malware---Bytes for a reason.. I posted I used it for as long as I remember!

All-In-One Anti-Malware

 

http://www.majorgeeks.com/mg/sortname/all_in_one_malware_removal_suites.html

 

Capture.PNG

 

Antivirus

http://www.majorgeeks.com/mg/sortname/all_in_one_anti_virus_suites.html

 

MajorGeeks has it wrong then as they say it is anti-Malware and they are not referring to Chameleon and neither was I:)///

 

All I was saying that most people made the claim it wasn't an AV (even MB themselves), but when testing/using, it did an equal (and better) job at removing "viruses" that it wasn't supposed to do. :) I invite anyone to try testing the old versions and see for themselves. 

  • 0

I went with Eset as I use it for my office PC's and have found their support to be brilliant, and some of the additional features on the business version are really useful.  Although on my home PC I'm using Kaspersky alongside Malwarebytes Pro.

  • 0
13 hours ago, James7 said:

I'm guessing that means it doesn't slow you down when whitelisted applications are running.

 
 

Not at all. This means that regardless of definition files nothing new executes in memory without my say so. They also have a huge list of company signatures. So those run without prompting.

  • 0

I bought a 1-year subscription to BitDefender earlier this year after not using a paid anti-virus for over a decade because I admit became a little paranoid about ransomware.  I uninstalled it after 3 months as it just seemed unnecessary and I backup my important ###### anyway. I have literally only had a couple of virus warnings in my whole history of using AV products (like 30 years).  Just being smart along with Windows Defender (cloud option off) , an ad-blocker, and no Flash or Java installed works for me.

 

 

18 hours ago, Rippleman said:

I think most will post simply what they have use without any actual testing or knowledge. Over the years, I have loved doing tests of many for cleaning and prevention. While I have NOT tested out all of the above mentioned names (as well as not doing a wide test for a couple years), Malwarebytes USED to be always top dog in any tests that I performed vs others like Panda, Norton, Macafee, Avast, AVG, Bit defender, Fsecure etc etc. For this reason, I still use Malwarebytes (and have for the last 7 years).

 

17 hours ago, Rippleman said:

Always a cool story when you/anyone says that, but it always "cleaned" up what other "antivirus" programs couldn't see and/or couldn't remove in ALL tests. Reversely, no protection suite I tested could ever find anything AFTER cleaning with MB. 

Disclaimer: Yes, perhaps I didn't get the "right" infections, however, the infections that I did get are standard files from websites, junk sites, warez sites, porn sites, hack sites, fake AV installs, fake patches, fake programs, bit torrent viruses etc etc etc, which would be what 99% of people would be subject to. 

 

I am kinda impressed you are talking all that time to setup test boxes to evaluate anti-virus products but... Personally I prefer to rely on a couple of sites that I trust that are more knowledge than me (or you) and test this stuff for a living but each their own.

  • 0
8 minutes ago, oldtimefighter said:

I bought a 1-year subscription to BitDefender earlier this year after not using a paid anti-virus for over a decade because I admit became a little paranoid about ransomware.  I uninstalled it after 3 months as it just seemed unnecessary and I backup my important ###### anyway. I have literally only had a couple of virus warnings in my whole history of using AV products (like 30 years).  Just being smart along with Windows Defender (cloud option off) , an ad-blocker, and no Flash or Java installed works for me.

 

 

 

 

I am kinda impressed you are talking all that time to setup test boxes to evaluate anti-virus products but... Personally I prefer to rely on a couple of sites that I trust that are more knowledge than me (or you) and test this stuff for a living but each their own.

i agree that is only anecdotal, but it is what it is. About 3 years ago I shut down the store stopped being in the computer business after 15 years, business just came down to trickle of what it used to be. Not too much demand for desktops and support compared to what it was like 15 years ago in my area.  One of the main things through that entire time though of course was viruses and cleanups. Guessing in that 15 years, had probably about 3,000 service calls with customers having viruses problems. Back in the day, options were limited on what a person could do and many times, the easiest/fastest solution was always format and start fresh. Thankfully when companies like MB and the like came around, it made other options start to be available. Malwarebytes (free and paid) were always my go-to program among others of course and did an amazing job. Now a days, if friends or family come to me, it still is my go-to program, after a clean up with malwarebytes, i then install 360 total security since it is free and hassle free and chrome with adblocker. . But, after all these years and my strong recommendations, not to many of my social circle people have issues since once i setup their machine, problems become drastically less likely (mostly non existent).  The only times I seem to have issues is when some of their grand-kids intentionally turn off protection to install something they shouldn't. :) 

I don't know what I did with the videos I made a couple years ago with the experiments of AV suites, It was definitely time consuming, and took days upon days of work. I may redo the tests again in 2017 with video. I still have interest in this stuff. 

  • 0

Hello,

 

Anti-spam is available in ESET Internet Security and ESET Smart Security Premium, but not in ESET NOD32 Antivirus.

 

Regards,

 

Aryeh Goretsky

 

On 1/2/2017 at 11:37 PM, Zagadka said:

I recently switched from Avast to ESET, and the one thing I'm really missing is Avast's email spam plugin. Other than that, happy.

 

  • 0
On 1/4/2017 at 10:25 AM, Mando said:

Webroot Secure Anywhere hands down.

 

 

EXACTLY!

When someone mentions another AV is better than webroot - I automatically assume its because they havent tried webroot.


FWIW - I have given a couple neowinians a webroot license for them to try it out  - I havent had 1 person tell me they uninstalled it...

 

This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Posts

    • But the reality is it will work for people's needs, and they don't care about the technology that makes it. Clearly not everyone's needs, but that low end space where personal laptops were only used to type emails, watch content and browse websites, but they didn't want to do that on a small screen device. Heck, writing that out I can now see the connection and reason it'll do so well. Apple is about experience. If the experience is bad, they don't release it. Low end Windows laptop manufacturers up until this point have not taken that into consideration ever before, so slow laggy usage with brittle slimey plastic shells were common. I hope that the low end space at least creates better physical products that last a bit longer, and if Microsoft get their act together, they could also have a solid OS on such low end hardware that would actually make the experience work for what the hardware was intended for. The fact that the CPU is a "cellphone", sorry mobile phone processor is irrelevant. It's about the experience, and so far, that sounds quite solid.
    • Hello, Bonjour is Apple's implementation of a multicast-DNS service, which allows devices running Apple's software and/or hardware to find each other on your local network.  I believe the Windows version was last updated around 2010. If you do not need it, you can stop and disable the Bonjour service in the Services Control Manager (filename: SERVICES.MSC).  Once you have done that, the operating system will no longer attempt to load the service. Regards, Aryeh Goretsky  
    • This AMD RX 9070 16GB GPU that performs close to Nvidia 5070 is under $600 by Sayan Sen With the memory shortage that's prevalent nowadays, discounts are super-hard to get. As such we post good deals whenever they pop up. Recently, we covered a few great discounts on SSDs wherein you can get a 4TB TeamGroup NVMe PCIe Gen4 drive for just $400 thanks to a special coupon. If you want a faster product but don't need all that capacity, you can also opt for Samsung's 990 PRO 2TB that is on sale for its lowest price in over three months. Let's say though that you are on the hunt for a 1440p gaming card. In that case AMD's RX 9070 non-XT can help, and with its 16GB VRAM, you can also run AI models locally without worrying about bottlenecking (check out our recent 9070 GRE reviews for gaming and productivity to get an idea). The PowerColor Reaper variant of the RX 9070 is currently on sale for just $580 which is a very good price in the current state of affairs (purchase link under the specs table down below). The Reaper cooler on this 9070 uses a triple‑fan design with ring‑blade fans, paired with premium dual ball bearings to extend lifespan and reduce friction. "Intelligent" fan control allows the fans to remain idle at lower temperatures, only spinning up when the GPU is under load. A nickel‑plated copper base makes direct contact with both the GPU and memory modules, helping to spread heat evenly. PowerColor also applies Honeywell PTM7950 phase‑change thermal interface material (TIM), which fills microscopic gaps between the die and heatsink for more efficient thermal transfer. The fan shroud is shorter in height as the firm has made it such that it can be used in certain SFF (small form factor) cases. The technical specifications of the Reaper RX 9070 are given in the table below: Specification Value Stream Processors 3584 Units Video Memory 16GB GDDR6 Memory Speed 20.0 Gbps Memory Interface 256-bit Engine Clock Game Clock: up to 2070 MHz Boost Clock: up to 2520 MHz Bus Standard PCI Express 5.0 x16 Display Connectors 1 x HDMI 2.1b, 3 x DisplayPort 2.1a Maximum Resolution DisplayPort: 7680 × 4320 HDMI: 7680 × 4320 Board Dimensions 289mm × 111mm × 41mm 304mm × 127mm × 42mm (with bracket) Slot 2 Minimum System Power Requirement 600W Power Connectors Two 8-pin PCI Express Get the PowerColor Reaper RX 9070 at the links below (you get only a 90-day warranty on Woot): PowerColor Reaper Radeon RX 9070 16GB Graphics Card (RX9070 16G-A): $579.99 (Sold and Shipped by Amazon US) (Was: $700) PowerColor Reaper Radeon RX 9070 16GB Graphics Card (RX9070 16G-A): $559.99 (Sold and Shipped by Woot US) Good to know This Amazon deal is U.S. specific, and not available in other regions unless specified. We only use first-party seller links (at the time of article publishing); ensure that you purchase from a first-party seller link only. Check out Today's Deals on Amazon | or our recent tech deals. Become a Prime member (for Students or SNAP) via Neowin Get Prime Access - Prime for half price (for qualifying Medicaid, EBT, SNAP) Subscribe to Prime Video, Audible Plus, Music Unlimited or Kindle Unlimited via Neowin As an Amazon Associate, we earn from qualifying purchases.
    • Are they marketed as an entry into astronomy or astrophotography? I do astrophotography. With big rigs, lots of computers, cables and headaches. I love it. And by learning this ridiculously complex hobby, I’ve learned about the objects I’m shooting. Astronomy followed from photography.
    • Microsoft confirms Recycle Bin bug across all versions of Windows by Usama Jawad A couple of days ago, we reported that the latest Patch Tuesday update has seemingly resulted in a lot of issues for many users, including OneDrive and Dropbox access problems, BitLocker recovery lockouts, and BSODs. Although Microsoft is yet to acknowledge these bugs, it has confirmed another, relatively smaller issue across all supported versions of Windows. In an update on its Windows Release Health Dashboard, Microsoft has confirmed that after installing June's Patch Tuesday update (KB5094126), you'll experience unexpected behavior when leveraging Recycle Bin. Basically, when you attempt to delete an item from the Recycle Bin, the confirm dialog will show you the internal file name of that content rather than the actual name. For example, the file may be named abc.png, but the confirm dialog will ask if you're sure that you want to permanently delete $Rxxxxx.png from the Recycle Bin. This is pretty much it for the scope of the bug itself; it just displays the wrong name in the confirm dialog. The correct name will be shown in the list view of the Recycle Bin and if you restore the file, it will return with the correct name as well. This issue affects pretty much all supported versions of Windows client and server, including: Client: Windows 11, version 26H1; Windows 11, version 25H2; Windows 11, version 24H2; Windows 11, version 23H2; Windows 10, version 22H2; Windows 10 Enterprise LTSC 2021; Windows 10 Enterprise LTSC 2019; Windows 10 Enterprise LTSB 2016 Server: Windows Server 2025; Windows Server 2022; Windows Server 2019; Windows Server 2016; Windows Server 2012 R2; Windows Server 2012 As things currently stand, Microsoft is working on a concrete solution that will be released in a "future" Windows update. It remains to be seen if the firm will wait till the next Patch Tuesday or roll out an out-of-band (OOB) fix. The good news is that commercial customers can deploy a workaround right now, but they will have to reach out to Microsoft Support for Business for additional details.
  • Recent Achievements

    • Week One Done
      Jordan Smith earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • Reacting Well
      BizSAR earned a badge
      Reacting Well
    • First Post
      AndreaB earned a badge
      First Post
    • Week One Done
      Huge Trailer earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • Week One Done
      Classifyskilleducation earned a badge
      Week One Done
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      579
    2. 2
      +Edouard
      184
    3. 3
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      75
    4. 4
      Michael Scrip
      72
    5. 5
      neufuse
      64
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!