I spent all day trying to rid myself of some major bad-ass fleas I picked up when I laid down 'mongst the dogs of Demonoid.
Seems some damn Trojan or some damn Worm or some damn Bot or some damn malicious piece of code was preventing me from logging on to Yahoo, Google, Altavista, AOl, or any of the major search and/or email sites. Fortunately, Apple's Safari Browser was not affected and it can be used by Windows machines now.
I think I had tried ESET, BitDefender, Trojan Remover 6.6.9, XPOnlineScanner remover, SmitFraudFix, Vundo Remover and others before I downloaded the latest free version of AVG and ran it. And it solved the problem!
I used to use AVG but abandoned it a couple of years ago when it wasn't keeping up with the rest of the pack. Now it looks like its ahead again. (I sometimes suspect that these AV outfits deliberately spread a few of these beasties around which only their programs can fix, just to force people to switch over).
Anyway, here's a good article from a couple of months ago comparing different AV software.
btw, I really liked Trojan Remover 6.6.9. It works really cool and it swept up everything - that is, except for what was ailing me.
It looks like the name of the game now is to use several of these packages in tandem. The trick is in knowing which ones complement one another.
I'm going to be getting a 64-bit machine in the very near future. I wonder if it's easier or harder to pick up fleas with one of those?
The Best Antivirus in 2008
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'J')an 29, 2008
A new year... A new beginning... And the inevitable security solution smackdown. In this context, AV-Test has thrown together in the same arena no less than 24 antivirus products from the heavyweights of the security market.
The security solutions were tested against in excess of 1 million malware samples from the last six months. According to Av-Test's Andreas Marx, the test involved only the top of the line, "'best' available Security Suite edition" from each vendor, last updated on January 7, 2008, and running on Windows XP SP2. And yes Microsoft's Windows Live OneCare 2.0 was tested, but no, it's not the best antivirus of 2008. Well, of the beginning of 2008, anyway...
"First, we checked the signature-based on-demand detection of all products against more than 1 Mio. samples we've found spreading or which were distributed during the last six months (this means, we have not used any 'historic' samples.) We included all malware categories in the test: Trojan Horses, backdoors, bots, worm and viruses. Instead of just presenting the results, we have ranked the product this time, from 'very good' (++) if the scanner detected more than 98% of the samples to 'poor' (--) when less than 85% of the malware was detected," Marx revealed.
In terms of signature-based on-demand detection, Windows Live OneCare 2.0 held its own. Microsoft's security solution ended up detecting a total of 992,880 out of all the malware samples thrown against it, and accounting for a "Signature Detection" rate of 96.9%. This is nothing short of an excellent score for Windows Live OneCare, an antivirus that at the beginning of 2007 managed to occupy positions only towards the bottom of the security solution pack in early 2007. In the latest AV-Test "Signature Detection" test OneCare 2.0 came on top of F-Prot (986,961 – 96.3%), Panda (979,409 – 95.6%), McAfee (959,919 – 93.7%) and Nod32 (953,936 – 93.1%).
However, OneCare 2.0 was bested by the likes of AVK 2008 (1,022,418 – 99.8%); AntiVir (1,020,627 – 99.6%); Avast! (1,018,204 – 99.4%); Trend Micro (1,009,662 – 98.6%); Symantec (1,006,849 – 98.3%); AVG (1,005,006 – 98.1%); BitDefender (1,003,902 – 98.0%); Kaspersky (1,003,470 – 98.0%); Sophos (1,001,655 – 97.8%) and F-Secure (999,806 – 97.6%). The complete results of the "Signature Detection" test from AV-Test can be accessed here, courtesy of Sunbelt Software...