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#11
Use MSE and Malwarebytes.
Use MSE and Malwarebytes.
That's right. It did.
Anti-virus apps are largely a matter of personal preference. Opinions vary widely. Some people place more value on published reviews than others.
Stick with one of the better known applications that you understand, can live with, and will keep updated and running properly. One that fits your budget. Kaspersky, Norton, MSE, Bit Defender, Avast, etc. I wouldn't agonize over which one.
Any of them will work well in conjunction with Malwarebytes, which searches for different things. The paid for version of Malwarebytes is I think about $20 per year and protects in real time, preventing stuff from entering your PC. The free version does NOT protect in real time, but will scan on demand. Sounds like you need the paid version.
I used Avast for a long time but about a year ago I started getting popups several times a day to purchase the full version I just got tired of the popups and changed to Avira Antivirus and I personally like it better.:)But that's just me.
I use MSE and Malwarebytes Premium and both can be set to auto update. They both run active..
I also use the Windows 7 built in firewall.
This combination works for me.
Ditto on MSE. I run the free MBAM weekly and Emsisoft EK occasionally for a deep check. Nothing ever shows up but I'm not a very active "downloader" and I don't share PCs or click on every link presented to me. One item of interest may be the fact that MS IE 10 & 11 catch almost 100% of the Socially Engineered Malware (SEM) attempts and leads all other browsers by a wide margin. This is part of the reason MSE, if even included in the tests, ranks lower than the rest of the billboard AVs. Microsoft's security is primarily OS and browser based and the AV reviews simply ignore it. Most of the tests use old data for MSE or copy from other slanted tests. When used with IE and UAC, MSE pretty much blows all the other AVs off the chart. Perhaps that's why it's not included with tests or leave portions out. :)