Message from @windows96

Discord ID: 792589372955688980


2020-12-27 01:24:33 UTC  

What's even more frustrating is when I send out a zip file (because there's a bunch of DLL's) and explicitly say; Please extract the entire archive then run someProgram.exe. And they shoot me back an email "Hey I get an error cant run the program"

2020-12-27 01:24:49 UTC  

Of course they didn't extract it and just tried to run the exe from the zip previewer

2020-12-27 01:28:34 UTC  

WinDef has gotten a lot better though haha

2020-12-27 01:29:30 UTC  

And I will point out that every single one of those 84 were viruses lol

2020-12-27 01:29:36 UTC  

Or trojans

2020-12-27 01:32:08 UTC  

I'd be more scared about what it *didnt* catch

2020-12-27 01:32:40 UTC  

The fact that you got windows defender to give you 84 legitimate warnings does not bode well for your safe computing practices

2020-12-27 01:33:16 UTC  

Lol it was intentional

2020-12-27 01:35:01 UTC  

But like I said ik you be bashing on WinDef, but like I already said it's way better than it used to be, and back at the beginning of 2020 was rated by several places among the 3 best free antivirus software out there

2020-12-27 01:35:49 UTC  

Fair

2020-12-27 01:37:29 UTC  

I have mixed feelings about antivirus software; I don't personally use it, too jaded from when they were big a decade ago in the times of NOD32. Those things were such monstrous resource hogs and really stifled productivity with active scanning on new files you wanted to work with

2020-12-27 01:37:52 UTC  

But at the same time when I see how older people or less techinical people use the pc and the shit they download and click on

2020-12-27 01:38:05 UTC  

I always recommend them getting an antivirus

2020-12-27 01:38:47 UTC  

Yeah. That's why I didn't bother installing any other ones, though I do have osarmor, which is very good imo

2020-12-27 01:39:37 UTC  

Think I heard a few years ago the founder of McAfee now considers McAfee itself pretty much malware/spyware

2020-12-27 01:39:46 UTC  

Although I think I also heard people saying he went kinda crazy

2020-12-27 01:39:50 UTC  

Lol

2020-12-27 01:39:59 UTC  

I also consider it malware <:ROFLMAO:451759517579870219>

2020-12-27 02:38:21 UTC  

i dont use any anti virus, i just avoid shady sites and only use reputable ones/downloads

2020-12-27 02:43:15 UTC  

Yeah. There's some times that I need to though so I like to have one

2020-12-27 03:07:12 UTC  

Just run whatever shady shit you need in a VM

2020-12-27 03:07:13 UTC  

call it a day

2020-12-27 03:43:07 UTC  

XD

2020-12-27 06:39:22 UTC  

I don’t use any anti viruses I’m pretty good at avoiding viruses

2020-12-27 06:54:05 UTC  

Does anyone know a good smaller mechanical keyboard that I can order for around 100

2020-12-27 07:10:51 UTC  

I'd strongly recommend you not disable the built in anti virus that comes with most modern OS's. Modern anti virus is a lot more then anti virus. It also protects you from malware which does not require user intervention to even get and some will protect you from zero day exploits with machine learning techniques. Anti virus also often gets signatures to protect you from new exploits in your software or OS while you wait for official patches to the software.

2020-12-27 07:11:26 UTC  

There are a few reasons to disable anti virus completely but they are outlier cases. Modern anti virus is fairly light on resources and had gotten a lot more intuitive about not running at the worst times.

2020-12-27 13:33:11 UTC  

Ehh

2020-12-27 13:37:38 UTC  

There have been plenty of times I've seen "Antimalware Service Executable" shoot to the top of Task Manager

2020-12-27 13:38:33 UTC  

"not disable the built in anti virus that comes with most modern OS's" correct me if I'm wrong, but Windows is really the only one that implements a (half-assed) anti-virus

2020-12-27 13:39:17 UTC  

Mac OS has general security warning for unknown publisher applications and Linux I know essentially has nothing built in

2020-12-27 13:44:52 UTC  

RE zero day exploits; this is really not that common IMO. I develop FDA medical devices (part 11 CFR and 510K) that run a custom embedded linux OS and the last exploit we patch for is dirty COW. I'm 100% certain there have been dozens of new exploits found and even publicly documented but I have seen 0 issues. As part of FDA submission we also get our products professionally pen tested by at least 3 different vendors and none of them have ever come back and said hey we were able to gain root privelege via exploit

2020-12-27 13:45:08 UTC  

My computer came with McCafe, it itself may as well be a virus. Has pop ups you can’t close for ex amount of time begging you to buy it, blue windows popups “your antivirus expired” etc

2020-12-27 13:47:38 UTC  

McAfee and Norton are the two biggest ones I know of that come pre-installed on Windows by the manufacturer and they both love popping up with "PLEASE BUY OUR SOFTWARE". I wouldn't be surprised if they used some shady practices like "32 Potential Problems found! Please upgrade to full protection to ensure your safety!!"

2020-12-27 13:48:15 UTC  

Not very much unlike the fake system scan scam ads

2020-12-27 13:51:02 UTC  

I will probably remove McAfee from my PC sooner or later since it’s not actually doing anything

2020-12-27 14:36:02 UTC  

*do it*

2020-12-27 15:23:29 UTC  

_do it_

2020-12-27 16:15:44 UTC  

Aight ty

2020-12-27 17:22:08 UTC  

Zero day exploits happen all the time. You just have to look at the ransomware attacks from a few years ago and see multiple of those used previously unknown zero-day exploits. One of them used an SMB exploit to spread through company networks to people like you who think that just because they use good practices they are secure. There was also another one that used another zero-day exploit that was previously only known to the NSA before it got leaked and then used to spread the ransomware. For non Windows examples, Linux had a exploit a few years ago where somebody found an exploit in SSH to be able to get into non-updated servers through the SSH. There was also just a few months ago a root escalation zero day attack exploit found in Linux.

2020-12-27 17:23:49 UTC  

According to Apple's own website, Macs include antivirus by default.