I'm just curious what other people's takes are on this. I used to run the Zone Alarm Pro firewall alongside Webroot Spysweeper (paid subscription) and Spybot S&D (freeware) anti-spyware program. But then Zone Labs hiked it's fee and I decided not to pay it, it's been at least two years and I haven't really noticed much a drop in security (which is why I never bothered to install ZoneAlarm Free Edition). Indeed I ended up disabling the component of Spybot that actively monitor's system activity (I believe it's called TeaTimer), because it would flag the sames things that Spysweeper did which caused me to have multiple pop-ups for each individual error. Both are just as capable of monitoring system changes (at least they were the last time I used TeaTimer), but I decided to use Spysweeper as the always running program because it's alerts are more detailed. However, I continue to use Spybot for periodic scans to catch what little slips past Spysweeper (which is often nothing). Anyway, my question is, does anybody think it's preferable to run a Firewall even when they have firewall capabilities in an anti-spyware program?
I ask this because Webroot has a firewall program and I really don't know what exactly it would catch that spysweeper itself doesn't. This could also apply to company's like Symantec who have Anti-Virus and then "Internet Security Suites."
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Question
Grand Maester
I'm just curious what other people's takes are on this. I used to run the Zone Alarm Pro firewall alongside Webroot Spysweeper (paid subscription) and Spybot S&D (freeware) anti-spyware program. But then Zone Labs hiked it's fee and I decided not to pay it, it's been at least two years and I haven't really noticed much a drop in security (which is why I never bothered to install ZoneAlarm Free Edition). Indeed I ended up disabling the component of Spybot that actively monitor's system activity (I believe it's called TeaTimer), because it would flag the sames things that Spysweeper did which caused me to have multiple pop-ups for each individual error. Both are just as capable of monitoring system changes (at least they were the last time I used TeaTimer), but I decided to use Spysweeper as the always running program because it's alerts are more detailed. However, I continue to use Spybot for periodic scans to catch what little slips past Spysweeper (which is often nothing). Anyway, my question is, does anybody think it's preferable to run a Firewall even when they have firewall capabilities in an anti-spyware program?
I ask this because Webroot has a firewall program and I really don't know what exactly it would catch that spysweeper itself doesn't. This could also apply to company's like Symantec who have Anti-Virus and then "Internet Security Suites."
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