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Definitive Best Antivirus 2010


Definitive Best Antivirus 2010  

1375 members have voted

  1. 1. Your Choice?

    • Antivir
      86
    • Avast!
      122
    • AVG
      36
    • BitDefender
      10
    • Clamwin
      4
    • F-Secure
      4
    • Kaspersky
      117
    • McAfee
      5
    • NOD32
      272
    • Norton
      86
    • Panda
      7
    • Sophos
      7
    • Symantec (Corporate)
      19
    • Trend
      7
    • VBA32
      1
    • Zone
      1
    • Microsoft Security Essentials
      558
    • Other (please specify)
      33


Question

An updated "Best Antivirus" for 2010. Please use this as a reference when researching antivirus utilities. As time goes on, the poll can be updated to add further options.

Happy Voting.

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  • 0

Wonder why people say MSE is light and low on memory usage, when it is not? It uses a lot of memory, and it isn't especially fast either which the last test in AV-Comparatives show. Also its scores in AV-Comparatives could be better in the on-demand test, but it does very good in the pro-active test (recently published). It's free, non-intrusive, has a slick UI and is overall good, but it is not light.

Here are two result tables from AV-Comparatives Feb2010 test;

Total detection rate in the Feb on-demand test. MSE version tested was v1.0.1611.0

ssvdf.png

MSE had great false positive rating though, which is good.

Jb3UC.png

The scanning speed is a large scan with the highest detection settings.

  • 0

Avira generally. Kaspersky is ok, but not freeware. MSE for Vista and Win 7 legal installations.

NOD32 is not good anymore. It missed trojan file, I sent this file to ESET two times, still w/o detection. IN general - NOD32 has quite low trojan/backdoor detection rate. There is no free version. I can't see any reason to still use it instead of Avira, Kaspersky or MSE.

About other products on the list - piece od s.....t ! Pesky AV programs like Panda, Sophos, Trend Micro are dangerous - low detection level, false positives for programs like Ultra VNC, false positives for UPX packed files. CRAP!

  • 0

Kaspersky Internet Security for me and Avast is the best of the "Free bunch" (although I'd not personally run it).

I like ESET Smart Security's low memory usage but it annoys me there is no White List/Black list, which means either you set it to Interactive Mode and get bugged by prompts or Auto Mode and it turns off security (such as the outgoing firewall). Neither are suitable solutions in my opinion. Kaspersky Internet Security has a White/Black list, so it knows (most of the time) what Apps to allow and what to block.

  • 0

Tried the latest MSE v2 BETA (like I always do) and the bug where disk and cpu usage crawls when you open a folder with a lareg number of zip/executables (eg: My Software backups and disc images folder) still exists.

Such a shame they have still not fixed this.

No other AV has this issue and as such AVAST 5 will remain my recommendation and primary choice.

Phamtom_Bob

That's like saying you don't wear a seatbelt because you know how to drive and won't ever crash. Completely silly thing to claim.

Many legit websites now have adverts or linkthroughs to ad enabled pages that can hijack your PC via os or browser exploits, other times a simple image can contain executable code and the rest of you need an AV to scan a file you're downloading or have been sent.

Most AV (like AVAST) do not consume resources but are very good at picking out issues on websites and files and notifying you.

I download wallpapers from skins.be for example and I am an FF user with AdBlock Plus but still the site sometimes manages to pass through an ad that AVAST detects as malicious and blocks it before it touches my harddrive.

One example from the other day:

avast_networkshield.jpg

Like I said, even legit sites, even with adblocking enabled, you can still get infected - however rare it may be.

  • 0

I'm sticking with Eset Smart Security for the 4th year in a row - I just cannot tolerate any other software firewall out there as the Eset Interactive mode is just too damn good.

I tried Kaspersky but configuring the firewall was far too simplistic and I could not figure out how to exclude specific folders from real-time protection :/

  • 0

None, if you know what you are doing. You don't need any. Haven't use one since 2008 :D

Last anti-virus I use was AVG

I agree, I never used one. I have tested a few - They were on test a pc and never used long term. After 20 years of pc use I never got a virus.

My perception of Anti-Viruses are that they are snake oil sales men. They pray on fear and the dumbness of the PC user. I admit that some people do need them, but the majority of the people who know what they are doing will never need them.

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