Do you use : No Antivirus , FREE Antivirus , or PAID Antivirus and why?

Page 27 - Seeking answers? Join the Tom's Guide community: where nearly two million members share solutions and discuss the latest tech.
Status
Not open for further replies.

FALC0N

Distinguished
Apr 5, 2010
66
0
18,590
Makes perfect sense. The Microsoft AV products are not meant to compete with commercial AV products. They are there to provide herd immunity. If you want a quality AV, then get a quality AV.
 

Joeteoh99

Estimable
Herald
Jul 20, 2014
282
0
5,210
I reckon Avira is one of the better ones after tests according to AV-Test and Malwarebytes are great for those malwares. Both go hand in hand for free antivirus softwares.
 
G

Guest

Guest
I use Paid antivirus because I don't want any weird gimmiks.

Some Antivirus programs just fake success so people pay then money for it.

I have Avira and I'm happy with it.
Tested it already and it works well
 

PhatLloyd

Estimable
Jul 1, 2014
17
0
4,560
I scraped Windows Defender and am now using AVG. Seems it picked up a few "threats" that Defender hasn't found. It also doesn't warn me about false positves that Defender gave me.
 

Joeteoh99

Estimable
Herald
Jul 20, 2014
282
0
5,210
I did use AVG before in the past, but some threats just couldn't be detected howevver, Avira was capable of detecting it and getting rid of it.

Anywyas, this is just all according to my own experience. :)
 

sedona

Honorable
Jan 13, 2014
10
0
10,570
I recently bought an Acer 13.3" laptop with Pentium N3540 on 4GB memory. It's not a powerful machine, gave it to the kids to watch Youtube videos and do homework on MS-Word and MS-Powerpoint. No gaming.

It comes with 30-days free trial of McAfee LiveSafe. But do I really need to pay for it? Do I need paid internet security suite? I have Adblock Plus on Mozilla Firefox browser which takes care of annoying pop-up ads and banners. After the 30-days, I'm going to uninstall McAfee and switch to the free no-hassle Bitdefender Antivirus Free Edition. Unlike other free antivirus, this one doesn't prompt me to pay for upgrades.
 

Joeteoh99

Estimable
Herald
Jul 20, 2014
282
0
5,210
Most McAfee do come pre-installed in Lenovos laptop too. So as mentioned, McAfee isn't a reliable antivirus software and you are better off uninstalling it and getting another free one like Avira.
 

Stellla

Estimable
Feb 21, 2015
2
0
4,510
I am using AVStrike trial version currently and its working pretty well. Other than that i have also used Avira which is also good at detecting & removing viruses, malwares,spywares,etc.
 

Turb0Yoda

Honorable
Herald
Jul 12, 2013
66
0
10,610
I wish I still had Webroot. It was one of the best ones I ever used. I was having a lot of trouble from avast and went to bitdefender. But only a scan option? Really? I went back to avast.

Other than the new Avast, I'm still with SSD and malware bytes, and zero viruses despite me downloading about 100 gigs worth of Operating System isos and a crap ton of other stuff. :p
 

ccjay80

Estimable
Feb 23, 2015
1
0
4,510
I use Avast Free Edition. I have used paid Anti virus software such as Norton and Mcafee and the Avast Free edition seem to be more effective.
 

vesp3r

Distinguished
Dec 11, 2014
215
0
18,910
Up untill recently i used on-demand scanners, because im usually very careful where i go and what i open (in internet)
Now however i use MSE - i dont think there is much difference between paid and free AV. MSE suits me best, its free, quiet and does a great job cleaning most of the common infections. I also like the simple and user-friendly design
 

vesp3r

Distinguished
Dec 11, 2014
215
0
18,910
then maybe suggest me something that works the same quiet way... i dont like it when the AV takes control and doesnt let me download certain files or start up a program
Maybe something more manual than automated, and the lighter the better :D
 

spooky2th

Distinguished
May 18, 2010
74
0
18,590
Kaspersky Lab Uncovers More Evidence Linking NSA to Infamous Hackers

Researchers from the Russia-based cybersecurity group Kaspersky Lab have uncovered more evidence tying the United States’ National Security Agency to a shadowy group of hackers.

The hacking collective, dubbed “Equation Group,” must have been sponsored by a nation-state with vast resources in order to operate, Kaspersky analysts assert.

Read More:
http://www.thedailysheeple.com/kaspersky-lab-uncovers-more-evidence-linking-nsa-to-infamous-hackers_032015




 
Status
Not open for further replies.