(3)| 11/2/2014 9:25 AM | |
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Joined: 11/21/2007 Last visit: 1/8/2026 Posts: 2327 Rating:
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Hello Wago My experience is "Nothing is Free" in the ultimate analysis. It is better to use only "Certified" compatible Antivirus software to avoid any trouble : https://support.automation.siemens.com/WW/llisapi.dll?func=cslib.csinfo&lang=en&objid=64847781&caller=view In any case the cost of antivirus is negligible compared to overall cost of systems so better to stick to certified ones only to avoid unwelcome surprises. I have seen people losing SIMATIC Licenses as some ( no approved ) anti-virus softwares detect them as "Viruses" Hope this helps Cheers Navnag |
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There is no such thing as the last bug in a program |
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| 11/2/2014 11:33 AM | |
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Posts: 5225 Rating:
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[?] Paid for advertisement? SPAM invasion? A trick.. or treat? |
| 7/14/2015 7:47 PM | |
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Posts: 1 Rating:
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I like Avast But I also use malwarebytes antimalware to get rid of things like http://malwareprotectioncenter.com/2015/07/13/search-protect/ Malwarebytes has it's own market niche |
| 10/28/2015 3:36 AM | |
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Posts: 1 Rating:
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I've been using Avast for 7 years, but recently I found it's not so good at detect adware, as my computer was infected with a nasty Daugava adware that always gave me endless pop-ups. I followed that removal guide and finally fixed the problem. So now I use two security programs on my computer. |
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