appreciated it Vinnie? You like AVG? I've heard mixed things. I got avast right now, and definitely not thrilled with it.AVG & it's free or you can get a Mac
Thats why i went to Macs too.. Guess what!!!!!!! there are now viruses for Macs !!!!AVG & it's free or you can get a Mac :0008
appreciated it Vinnie? You like AVG? I've heard mixed things. I got avast right now, and definitely not thrilled with it.
Thats why i went to Macs too.. Guess what!!!!!!! there are now viruses for Macs !!!!
none here yet:0008run a network of mac's never had one :shrug:
i don't fix things that aren't broken :11jackson
if it works for Vinnie it will work for anyone......just saying.....:SIB
The computer virus of old (Locks up puter, bogs down system resources, re-directs browsers) is a dying relic. The last virus I can think of that had any of those characteristics is the FBI Moneypak Virus and it wasn't a tough one to get rid of.
Data collection has replaced the computer viruses and there are much more simpler ways to get the info. Phishing, Spam emails and website data forms where the marks just willing give their information.
I don't have virus protection on my personal computers and rely on not downloading and running programs that don't come from a trusted site. Never following links sent via email. Always checking the web address before entering login information and generally being aware of situational danger. One of my favorite stories is from a client who said they realized they had probably run a program they shouldn't have but pressed the cancel button when given the opportunity. I told them that people that write computer viruses usually don't give you a chance to cancel and that whatever button they pushed would have lead them down the rabbit hole.
Any of the software listed should work. AVG is free and I have put it on more computers than any of the others. Norton once saved a client's computer that I was unable to rid of a pesky virus. Because of that, I also find value in the Norton's, McAfee's, Sopho type protection but for the most part tell people they don't need to pay for it. Paying $100 to protect a $300 computer isn't a good deal and with offline storage cheap and easy to setup your main risk is not losing data but having to spend time to fix a problem.
I haven't had to fix a computer virus related issue in about a year
I do and I know they do but there is nothing that has to be downloaded or installed to watch on those streaming sites. I kind of appreciate the greyed out x's on the popup's that jump when you mouse over. That took some advanced thinking to come up with and develop. If you download something from one of those sites and then run it, that falls under my "Don't downloading and running programs that don't come from a trusted site. "my computer-savvy brother...you never watch sports on any of those dodgy sports streaming websites?....I know those mofos try and stick all kinds of goobbledy-goop on your computer....
I do and I know they do but there is nothing that has to be downloaded or installed to watch on those streaming sites. I kind of appreciate the greyed out x's on the popup's that jump when you mouse over. That took some advanced thinking to come up with and develop. If you download something from one of those sites and then run it, that falls under my "Don't downloading and running programs that don't come from a trusted site. "
I think someone on this site got the FBI Moneypak from one of the streaming sites but haven't heard what other types of viruses you can get from those sites
While we're talking computers and you brought up the streaming sites, they usually ask me to turn off my adblock plus while on their pages. Here is a link to adblock plus which helps eliminate popups and on some sites, the annoying 30 second ad videos that play before the video you want. It's free and I've found it useful - https://adblockplus.org/
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