80 percent of viruses love Windows 7


Recommended Posts

This is why Microsoft will always going to lose more and more markets. They brainwashed their users telling them that this is the more secure and better windows yet.

MS users Brainwashed? LOL

Capt Irony asplodes!!!!!!

And if Microsoft do something in Win 8 to prevent viruses/malware being installed, say...... bundle Security Essentials with the OS... Who will be the first to file the anti-trust case?

It's simple. The most dangerous component of any PC/mac is the user. If you run any unknown app then you deserve to have your files deleted.

This is why Microsoft will always going to lose more and more markets. They brainwashed their users telling them that this is the more secure and better windows yet. But its just another windows version like all previous. Microsoft need really to do something from scrath for windows 8 or Apple will keep getting more market shares!!!

The only brainwashed one here is you, Windows 7 and Vista are infinitely more secure than XP ever was. Windows 7 has a lot of the same underlying code as XP and Vista so stating that it is still vulnerable to viruses is just another large case of stating the bleeding obvious.

Oh and the UAC in 7 wasn't even designed to be more secure, it was designed to be less intrusive, auto elevation actually theoretically makes it marginally less secure. Sophos need to get their facts straight and stop sensationalising things to sell their products

Edited by Frank Fontaine
Well it's not Apple per se.. it's what's happening in the media with companies.. Apple is just coming out with more and more stupidity trying to present Windows in some false light. Sophos is doing useless tests that have no connection with reality because Microsoft now has an anti-virus solution that's free and very effective and I'm sure we wont' see the end of it soon. Seems that companies have more and more PR campaigns that spit on Windows instead of actually showing why their products are better.

Well OK, I know what you mean, but your comment was really out of context in this thread. This is about Sophos and Microsoft, let's not derail this even further.

Please just shut up, Cabron. I own a Mac and love it, but I know its limitations. I'm just as open to having all my user files deleted by a virus as any Windows machine is. Snow Leopard and Windows 7 are very similar, and I don't see one being better than the other when you look at the two side by side. It just boils down to personal preference.

However, I think that both Microsoft and Apple should be careful in lulling their users into a false sense of security just to get sales. That's the kind of crap that leads to pointless class action lawsuits.

Best comment so far (Y)

i can fully understand as to why this would be accurate being that they did not really change that much from vista to 7 so if the virus/malware worked in vista there is a rather large chance that it would work under Win 7 as well. Just my opinion though.

Please just shut up, Cabron. I own a Mac and love it, but I know its limitations. I'm just as open to having all my user files deleted by a virus as any Windows machine is. Snow Leopard and Windows 7 are very similar, and I don't see one being better than the other when you look at the two side by side. It just boils down to personal preference.

However, I think that both Microsoft and Apple should be careful in lulling their users into a false sense of security just to get sales. That's the kind of crap that leads to pointless class action lawsuits.

QFT

So you mean, if you download a fake AV and then when go to run it, UAC appears and you click continue, you mean it will actually install?????? OMG!!!!.

Just what I was thinking. Not all the security programs in the world can help a stupid user.

Wow, not having an antivirus seems really unfair, but at least it'll be interesting to hear from the 'I never run an antivurs and never have security problems on Windows' crowd.

This describes me. :p

I haven't used antivirus since XP. I've never had any infections (well at least I don't think I've ever). If you know where to stay away from, and the software you are using doesn't have massive security holes, you should be fine.

During the betas of 7 and Vista, before I'd upgrade to the new build, I'd install a scanner just to see, and not to my surprise, I was fine.

If you stay away from shotty sites, goofy chain mail attachments, make sure your software is up to date, and use a e-mail provider that scans incoming e-mails, you should be pretty safe.

Also, it was AV companies who forced Microsoft to open up/weaken it's x64 kernel so they could have access to the OS's higher functions... I believe they bitched to the EU about this.

The main culprit in that case was Symantec. They didn't want to have to rewrite the back end to make it work, so they complained that they couldn't make it work with the new kernel protections and considering other security vendors had no issues making their apps work with the new OS (Vista), Microsoft should have sued Symantec in to oblivion for filing a false suit.

Please just shut up, Cabron. I own a Mac and love it, but I know its limitations. I'm just as open to having all my user files deleted by a virus as any Windows machine is. Snow Leopard and Windows 7 are very similar, and I don't see one being better than the other when you look at the two side by side. It just boils down to personal preference.

You're also open to having your files deleted by the OS. No need for malicious software there. :laugh:

This describes me. :p

I haven't used antivirus since XP. I've never had any infections (well at least I don't think I've ever). If you know where to stay away from, and the software you are using doesn't have massive security holes, you should be fine.

During the betas of 7 and Vista, before I'd upgrade to the new build, I'd install a scanner just to see, and not to my surprise, I was fine.

If you stay away from shotty sites, goofy chain mail attachments, make sure your software is up to date, and use a e-mail provider that scans incoming e-mails, you should be pretty safe.

True, to a point. I have security software installed not to protect me from me, but from others who connect in to the network.

That report is so light on details and it is clearly to drive more sales for Sophos but was there any doubt that if you run *any* malware in user context, it will damage the system? Say there is a virus that reads user's address book and then spams all contacts using the default mail client.... that will work equally good on a Mac or Linux or any damn OS.

Yes, it has nothing to do with Windows. A virus is just malicious self-replicating code, which normally embeds itself in other executables (versus a trojan which is a program that pretends to be something else, like a key generator, but turns out to be malicious) so that when the user runs the program, he gets infected. If you add the ability to infect systems automatically by exploiting bugs, you've got a worm.

UAC isn't that relevant here. It's not a security barrier, and it's not designed to stop malware. Technically speaking most malware doesn't really need to be written to need admin access at all. They can spy on you, steal your files, use the network, hide from task manager, make themselves automatically load just as a standard user, and so on.

If they got admin, that would just be a bonus that would make it harder to remove, and that would give the malware the ability to infect other users (most systems are single-user, so this isn't relevan). It could also end up impacting system stability.

If you only were to run the malware as a standard user you would actually risk giving it admin access anyway, because if can hijack elevation requests of something you think is legitimate. In other words you don't really know whether the whole system has been compromised or not even in this scenario.

The only thing that can protect against malware is antivirus software, which can at least attempt to block known threats before they have a chance to execute. This should also be combined with the habit of never running any executables at all unless you really have to and know you can trust them. This is hard to get people to do.

Most Windows infections these days are because the user voluntarily ran something he shouldn't have. This is hard to prevent, as it takes advantage of the user and not any bugs in the OS.

OK, well I guess if that's that case then Microsoft should start bundling Security Essentials with Windows 7 ... I mean this IS what Sophos is suggesting they need to do, isn't it? They're not going to whine and moan about it if Microsoft includes it, are they? Sophos? Talk to me babe...

Please just shut up, Cabron. I own a Mac and love it, but I know its limitations. I'm just as open to having all my user files deleted by a virus as any Windows machine is.

I wasn't aware of that kind of virus for OS X. Wanna share some details?

I wasn't aware of that kind of virus for OS X. Wanna share some details?

There's no actual virus out there like that, but it wouldn't be hard to code one and make it work. Hell, just rm -rf ~/* would work. It doesn't even need elevated privileges.

It's called OS.X/UzGuestAccLOLz

I don't want to sound like a denier here because I know the bug exists and it's a serious flaw, but it's still not common and can simply be fixed by disabling and re-enabling the guest account. It only happens on installations of Snow Leopard that were upgraded from Leopard installations with the guest account enabled. The guest account toggle I mentioned fixes it because it sets it up like Snow Leopard expects it to be set up.

Not sure how Apple or any of the developers beta testing Snow Leopard (me included) missed it, but oh well. Running Time Machine just became all the more important. :p

Edited by Elliott
There's no actual virus out there like that, but it wouldn't be hard to code one and make it work. Hell, just rm -rf ~/* would work. It doesn't even need elevated privileges.

I don't want to sound like a denier here because I know the bug exists and it's a serious flaw, but it's still not common and can simply be fixed by disabling and re-enabling the guest account. It only happens on installations of Snow Leopard that were upgraded from Leopard installations with the guest account enabled. The guest account toggle I mentioned fixes it because it sets it up like Snow Leopard expects it to be set up.

Not sure how Apple or any of the developers beta testing Snow Leopard (me included) missed it, but oh well. Running Time Machine just became all the more important. :p

I know, I was just showing how foolish his ant-Window posts are. All it takes is one bad thing to tarnish the name, which the guest acc thing did for OS X. As per his logic, not mine. ;)

I don't really care, I was primarily a OS X user from late 2004-early 2007 (when I switched to Vista). I have used OS X panther through leopard and almost all versions of Windows. It's down to what you like/prefer. People like that dude are just...trolls.

Read the article, I quickly ran to the closest computer store bought myself a mac, apparently i had to pay extra money for a non-pink version. I loaded it up, saw that I cannot run any actual good programs, returned it. And now I can say im back to my crazy virus loving Windows 7. RAWR!

At the Pwn2Own contests, the macs always get hacked first. 'Nuff said.

Hacked, yea. Apple's managed to fix those vulnerabilities (usually involving third-party libraries in things like Safari or DNS). Viruses, not yet, but I wouldn't be surprised if someone managed to create one that could outbreak.

Read the article, I quickly ran to the closest computer store bought myself a mac, apparently i had to pay extra money for a non-pink version. I loaded it up, saw that I cannot run any actual good programs, returned it. And now I can say im back to my crazy virus loving Windows 7. RAWR!

Funny you should say that. I loaded up Windows 7 in Boot Camp, saw that I couldn't run any "actual good programs" and uninstalled it. It's called a choice, buddy.

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

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Posts

    • Uninstalr 3.1 by Razvan Serea Introducing Uninstalr: Easy to use and very accurate software uninstaller for Windows. It can uninstall multiple apps at the same time and we think it’s pretty cool. Developed with expertise by Macecraft Software - the minds behind jv16 PowerTools. Key Features Batch uninstall many apps at the same time. Supports unattended uninstallation of apps. Supports monitoring of new software installations. Also detects portable apps and previously uninstalled software leftovers. Shows all the data added to your system by installed software on a file by file basis. Shows all the data it will remove before starting the uninstallation. Filter and search the list of installed software. According to our benchmark, Uninstalr is the most accurate software uninstaller by leaving the least amount of leftovers when uninstalling apps. Supports detection and uninstallation of Microsoft Store, Steam, Big Fish Game System, Chocolatey, NuGet and Ninite installed software. Supports Windows Dark Mode. Supports Windows 11, 10, 8 and 7. Comes with these translations builtin: Chinese Simplified, Chinese Traditional, Czech, Danish, English, Filipino, Finnish, French, German, Greek, Hindi, Hungarian, Indonesian, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Malay, Norwegian, Polish, Portuguese, Romanian, Slovak, Spanish, Swedish, Thai, Turkish, Ukrainian and Vietnamese. Has a single executable file portable version and a normal setup version. Uninstalr is freeware, lightweight and easy to use. No bells and whistles, no nonsense. Uninstalr’s custom uninstallation engine has a dedicated support for the detection and uninstallation of 15 types of apps: Normal Windows apps Microsoft Store apps Portable apps Chocolatey apps Ninite apps PortableApps.com apps Steam games EA App games Epic Games Store games Riot platform games GOG Galaxy games WarGaming.net games Battle.net games itch.io games Big Fish platform games Uninstalr 3.1 changelog: Key Changes Uninstalr now starts and shows the list of installed apps faster after the initial scan has been completed, and with much smaller memory usage. Uninstalr now detects and highlights apps that automatically start with Windows. Greatly improved the detection of portable apps. Improvements New feature: Uninstalr now detects and highlights apps that automatically start with Windows. New feature: Uninstalr now highlights possible leftovers and apps from Russia and China. This can be disabled from the Settings. New feature: A new filter that allows you to show only software that is installed to other than the system drive. New feature: Users can now select to always do the deepest and the most accurate scan for installed apps, at the cost of the analysis taking a longer time. Greatly improved the detection of portable apps, such as added dedicated support for MiTeC, EZ Tools and SysInternals tools. Improved support for portable apps installed via Windows System Control Center (WSCC). NirSoft portable apps are now listed with "NirSoft" prefix for easier identification. Improved the speed of uninstalling apps. The main installed software listing search will now find "Xbox GameBar" if you search for "Game bar" and vice versa. The tooltip now displays more detailed information of the installed apps, such as its registry key and uninstaller path. The links in the About section now look more like clickable links. The main menu is now more clearly indicated in the main user interface. Microsoft Teams Meeting Add-in for Microsoft Office ships with some Windows 11 installations and is now considered a builtin Windows app and only listed if builtin Windows apps filter is enabled. Added a Help button to the main user interface that opens the help section of the website. Added an option not to close Uninstalr after uninstallation. If you open the Uninstalr website from the app, the website now receives the version number of your current Uninstalr version and warns you if you are using anything but the latest version. Improved the accuracy of the New Software Monitor. Improved confirmation messages for Steam and other platform related uninstalls. Improved the uninstallation performance of Steam games. Fixes: Known bug fixed: Some installed app names are capitalized incorrectly, such as "CCleaner Portable" is listed as "ccleaner portable". Known bug fixed: Some apps can be listed twice, for example, Smart Defrag can be listed once as Smart Defrag and then Smart Defrag Home. Known bug fixed: On the pre-uninstallation screen, the Scripts checkbox can be checked by default on Dark Mode but not on the normal mode. Known bug fixed: Perform Deep Analysis can be started only by clicking the button, not via the Right Click menu, main menu or F4 keyboard shortcut. Muse Hub could be incorrectly listed as Adobe Muse. SyncTrayzor was incorrectly detected as two unrelated software, SyncTrayzor and Syncthing. Smart Defrag was incorrectly listed twice as Smart Defrag 11 and Smart Defrag Home. It was possible to enter non-printable characters to the search input boxes of the main screen, and the path listing screen, which caused the UI to look funny. Changing the translation from Settings, especially many times in a row, caused the UI to distort. If you had multiple instances of portable apps on your system, such as the 64b and 32b versions of the same portable app, typically only one of them was detected, not both. In some very rare cases, Uninstalr UI could start with random characters in its search input boxes, which could make the UI look rather confusing. This was a rare issue, only reported by two users. The pre-uninstallation screen could display non-existing paths for example as the software's installation directory or main exe file. This was a cosmetic issue. New Software Monitor cannot detect the installation of Claude. Selecting all the found software made the UI look funny with the top panel covering everything else (because the names of all the selected software were listed there). Sometimes a Steam game could be listed a normal app instead of a Steam game. If the system restart after an uninstallation is delayed, e.g. because of Windows Updates being installed, this additional delay is incorrectly added to the time how long the uninstallation process took. This cosmetic bug could cause the program incorrectly report an uninstallation time longer than the actual uninstallation time. Uninstalling Minecraft could simply fail. The Only scan the system drive for installed apps setting does not fully work. If some apps are installed to a non system drive and this setting is enabled, the app could still be detected and listed on the main user interface. Changing any settings could also incorrectly alter the Only Scan The System Drive For Installed Apps setting. Microsoft OneDrive and Copilot are not always detected. If you enter something to the search filter field, then select the text and press the Delete key, this triggers the Uninstall button click even if your intent was to delete the text input. If you press the F5 key to refresh the screen during the uninstallation loading screen, the program will crash. If you enabled some setting, such as "Do not analyze installed app installation sizes", it could automatically be unchecked later. Uninstalr doesn't warn you if you try to remove Fortec antivirus. There should be a warning if user attempts to remove any antivirus or antimalware type program. Such programs should not be uninstalled using a third party uninstaller, as they are typically protected against automated uninstallation, for security reasons. With "Do not analyze installed app installation sizes" option checked from the Settings, Uninstalr could still display some installation size related elements in the UI which was confusing. The "Only scan the system drive" option moved under Improve Scan Speed from the General settings. If two software have the exact same name and version number, selecting both of them for uninstallation fails because only one is actually selected. Sorting the installed apps by size sometimes fails and the order is incorrect. The "Don't show which paths are currently analyzed" did not work correctly - some parts of the UI still show the currently analyzed path with this setting checked. The "Don't list software less than 10 MB" filter did not work correctly - some apps smaller than 10 MB could still be listed. Uninstalr could start very quickly and display an empty list of detected apps. Restarting the app usually fixed the issue and the list of installed apps was properly displayed. If you placed portable Uninstalr to a same folder with other portable apps, those were not detected because Uninstalr automatically added its installation folder to the ignore list. When trying to uninstall some specific software, Uninstalr could get stuck on the Searching for more data relating to the app phase. Uninstalr could sometimes do a silent uninstallation even if user had unchecked the Perform a silent uninstallation option. Known issues: Uninstalr can fail to run with an Out Of Memory error in systems that have a lot of installed apps. Using the New Software Monitor tool multiple times during one session can cause the program to get stuck on the Scanning stage. The "uninstallation completed" message box sometimes closes when the user moves the mouse cursor over the button before user clicks it. There is no feedback for the user after Fix Information feature has been used. The Right Click menu's Select by publisher option can display the number of apps per each publisher without correct vertical alignment. The default user interface might not display all of the found installed apps if you have over 600 installed apps. If you do, using the Screen Reader Compatible Interface solves the issue. Leftover apptype filter checkbox is shown in red font only in Dark Mode. Clicking the app's icon from the Windows Taskbar doesn't minimize/restore the app like other apps. The warning about an app that user wishes to uninstall being related to some other app user did not select can sometimes be inaccurate. If app's language is changed without restarting Uninstalr, the list of installed software might not automatically refresh. When software is being uninstalled, the UI can say it is processing paths unrelating to the uninstalled app. This is purely cosmetic and does not mean these paths are removed. Uninstalr might not properly detect and/or uninstall Steam games if they are installed to a drive different than Steam's default location in C:\. You might see "This action is only valid for products that are currently installed" error message from Windows Installer during uninstallation. This is a cosmetic issue. Download: Uninstalr 3.1 | 7.1 MB (Free, paid version available) Download: Uninstalr Setup 3.1 View: Uninstalr Website | Screenshot Get alerted to all of our Software updates on Twitter at @NeowinSoftware
    • I and many others did not vote to get out of the E.u because of Putin or Farage, we did so for our own reasons. You don't have to tel me what my own did or did not do when it comes to the E.U. The EEC is or was the European Economic Community, a different beast to what the E.U is now.The EEC was a mainly about trading, the E.U have gone far beyond that and as I have said before, is now more of a United States of Europe. The U.K did not vote to join a United States of Europe. Anyway, they did not want us in there in the first place, Charles de Gaulle stopped us joining as he claimed we didn’t agree with the core ideas of integration. He was not wrong and that is why we voted out of the E.U when the time came. I was not old enough to vote the first time. My only regret is that we did not have the referendum years ago and got out years ago. If we rejoined, we would have to agree to join the Euro and no doubt Schengen, agree with freedom of movement, we have enough problem with people coming over here as it is. i have no problem with people coming over here if they work and don't try to push their way of life onto us. The E.U has a currency, freedom of movement, an anthem a flag, a parliament, well they are there, not sure if they do anything. Don't sound like something that is just for trading. Oh yeah, also wanted a euro Army. How many stupid rules have the E.U made that we had to follow? I doubt I will see the Uk rejoin the E.U, which suits me. Oh yeah, my partner is Polish, she came over here before Poland joined the E.U and she got fed up of people just coming over here with ease, while she had to struggle. She is now a British citizen and have been for a fair few years
    • Hello, Paul. Thanks for the editorial. It was interesting. I'm going research more into the app and its concept. Of course, if you know me at all, you know that I'd say your articles needs some editing! I always do, don't I? For instance, the article occasionally mentions relays before defining it.
    • Screamer is 50% off on Steam, making it £24.99 here in the UK: https://store.steampowered.com/app/2814990/Screamer/ You might remember the series from the mid 90s / early 2000s, this new game is also by Milestone who created the older games.
    • U.S. partially reverses Anthropic AI ban for Mythos but keeps Fable 5 off the market by Karthik Mudaliar Anthropic says that the U.S. government has finally allowed it to restore Claude Mythos 5. But of course, there's a catch. The rollout is again for a limited set of U.S. organizations that operate and defend critical infrastructure. The company announced this in a post on X (formerly Twitter). This does not mean that Anthropic's latest frontier models are back to normal availability. Fable 5, which was a tuned version of Mythos 5 for public release, remains unavailable. Anthropic said that it is still working with the government to expand Mythos 5 access and make Fable 5 available again, but there's no timeline. Reports from Bloomberg and Reuters say that this decision actually came through a letter from the U.S. Commerce Department. According to Reuters, this would allow more than 100 companies and institutions access to Mythos 5. Reuters also reported that Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick’s letter removes the need for export licenses for approved companies’ non-US citizen employees, as well as Anthropic’s own non-US citizen employees, while restrictions remain for organizations outside the approved list. Anthropic isn't alone with this kind of controlled rollout. OpenAI's newest model family, GPT 5.6, was announced just yesterday, but isn't available for everyone yet. In its announcement, OpenAI also said that access to these models is initially limited to a select group of trusted partners and organizations, with broader access planned later this year. Both of these cases show that frontier AI launches are no longer just ordinary product releases and more like slow and vetted deployments shaped heavily by the U.S. government.
  • Recent Achievements

    • Week One Done
      flexorcist earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • One Month Later
      Woland13 earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • Week One Done
      Woland13 earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • One Year In
      bernmeister earned a badge
      One Year In
    • Week One Done
      Scoobystu earned a badge
      Week One Done
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      495
    2. 2
      +Edouard
      226
    3. 3
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      154
    4. 4
      Steven P.
      75
    5. 5
      FloatingFatMan
      71
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!