quot;I'll continue here tomorrow with more free offers in the Antivirus and Firewall area which is really a must for every Windows user.quot; -- (Jan 30th news).
here's my list of free for home user Virus Protection.
antivirus/
Why thank you.. you just made my job easier. I was only aware of AVG and Anti-Vir.
great thanks
the quot;microsoft AV offerquot; seems to only gather your personnal data, haven't got the mail to download it yet...
does anyone know a good freeware firewall?
Believe it or not, ZoneAlarm version 2 (Not versions 3 or 4) is a fantastic firewall which is free for home users.
The first time an application accesses the internet (as a client or server), ZA prompts you if it should allow it, and if it should remember your answer each time the app starts.
I'm embarrassed to admit, but ZA has identified several stealthy trojans when it popped up the quot;connectionquot; message unexpectedly. The most recent, a week ago, that no trojan or virus scanner except TDS-3 picked up, but no one can remove it as of yet. (The new self-modifying code and multiple copies running - kill one and it spawns another). Sent off the binaries of the trojan and reinstalled Windows. How this latest got on my machine is beyond me - I never open attachments or install apps over the web, I'm on SP4, and I have all security updates installed.
I use ZA in conjunction with a hardware firewall configured with your typical outbound-only rules but no stateful packet inspection. The real nice thing about the new generation of hardware firewalls is the fact you can bandwidth shape based on protocol. By default when a socket opens, it will attempt to consume 100% of your bandwidth until finished. You can throttle this down, to say, 40%, thus allowing other types of traffic such as from to consume the rest.
I use Kerio Personal Firewall myself.
My internet connection is via DSL. I route through the DSL modem and into a Linksys cable/DSL router. I've assumed that it is acting as a hardware firewall providing adequate security. Have I been fooling myself and either have no protection or need to add software firewall and if so, does this have to be installed on all PCs in my home network?
@windtrader
The router will keep you should from hackers only. Your Linksys DSL router NATs down to private IP addresses (probably 192.168.0.x) so, unless you explicitly tell the router to forward traffic to one of your machines, no inbound connections from the router are allowed from the Internet.
This however does not prevent malicious code from being run on your machine. Prime example: Some Internet sites attempt install malicious applications posing as something innocent - like a search toolbar. Most children (and many adults) don't realize the consequences when things are installed. Next to email attachments, that is how most computers get infected these days (Trojans floating around on the peer-to-peer networks may now be #2)
bit-wise,
Thanks. I feel better. For the stuff I let through, I have several software tools that inspect, reject, flag, etc. potential virus stuff. I have McAfee Virus Scan Pro on all the time, except in the rare occasion where I turn it off temporarily while doing a big FTP or download/upload of files. I have Ad-Aware Pro running all the time to manage popup stuff, use the Internet settings to block all cookies except those in my list (privacy=high, security=med), run Sybot Search and Destroy to clear other crap off the system. Email comes in/out via yahoo and two private servers that keep on top of applying server based spam and virus scanning. NEVER execute anything I am not sure of, except stuff I dl via usenet and that gets checked by McAfee (I hope, so far no problems). I feel covered; do you see I am missing anything else?
thx
@windtrader: An example of what you're missing: HyperSnap DX phones home.. regardless of if you use a demo, cracked demo (god behave), or a fully registered version. Now I have paid my license fee and I don't think they have a right to phone home so all connection attempts from that software stop with Kerio.
It might not be to stop malicious software that allows other people to use your PC for stuff you'd not authorize.. even software that looks trustworthy can't be trusted. And MS software also has the nasty tendency to phone home. I'd rather rest easy knowing that I'm in charge of what goes out.
hm is irc chatting known to be abused as a big potential securtiy hole?
i mean its an open connection through the firewall, anything which can be done to make it safer?
HyperSnap DX phones home..
Does not compute... What do you mean quot;phone homequot;, like ET. What is going on and how would that compromise security in my system? I do have Hypersnap DX5 but do not operate in a resident mode, I just load it when I need to snap something then shut it down.
I'd rather rest easy knowing that I'm in charge of what goes out.
and what measure are you taking to ensure that?
thx
What do you mean quot;phone home
It contacts a server by the Hypersnap makers. I don't know what kind of data is transmitted.. but I don't want to send them a single byte.
and what measure are you taking to ensure that?
Software firewall and strict rules to what is allowed to connect outside. Obviously you can never be a 100% but that's life.
Another good free firewall is Sygate personal firewall.
A couple of free antivirus protection programs not to get IIRC.
-Bitdefender...doesn't have resident memory protection (in their free offering). You might as well run a free online scanner daily.
-RavAntivirus (which Microsoft bought btw)
they don't have resident memory either...how lame is that.
-Microsoft/ Computer Associates....asks for address, ph#, etc. I put all bogus but still it seems like it's only for certain pcs, etc. Didn't really like it though.
All of these are free for HOME use only. Just like lavasoft ad-aware. That's why we use spybot at work since it's free.
Yes, I use Sygate firewall and i'is quite good. As antivirus I have AntiVir Personal, which is free for personal use: .
Originally posted by Doom9
And MS software also has the nasty tendency to phone home.
This might be related to Wolfman's theory of Bill Gates being an alien, as exposed on this funny response to nikthebak regarding this virus in a movie.
It contacts a server by the Hypersnap makers. I don't know what kind of data is transmitted.. but I don't want to send them a single byte.
It's kind of scary to think about all the programs one (geeks like us) usually has loaded and how many are probably doing all kinds of crap like this. As you state, who knows what the hell they are sending back quot;homequot;.
Guess y'all have given me enough fright to get off my lazy ass and do some firewall tire kickin'. However, I remain resistant to loading only what MUST be loaded; It is amazing how much crap gets loaded no matter how hard you try to keep it down. need this.. need that......
I'm glad to see this topic has provoked conversation from at least a few people. 98% of the users out there are ignorant of how to lock down a Windows box and thus viruses and back doors abound...
I agree, it's a huge legal grey area on what can and can not be sent back to the product manufacturer - in my opinion, the less the better. (read: none).
@bond
IRC clients are pretty much safe, but there is a new wave of back doors that once quot;installedquot; IRC to the world your IP address and the root/admin password to your machine.
To add to your toolbox of weapons, I also use a freeware product called Starter from CodeStuff which shows you a list of all applications that are loaded at start up and currently running processes. Note, there are zillions of services out there, so here is a site that list the service name, executable, what it is, and if its needed.
I have yet to find a good software firewall that really allows me to define rules in a manner similar to hardware firewalls such as Checkpoint. If anyone knows of one... |