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View Full Version : What is a 2 way Firewall program?


truthseeker
January 26th, 2008, 05:14 PM
Hello,

I use the Vista built in Firewall.

But I have read that it's only 1 way Firewall, and that I need a 2 way Firewall.

What exactly is a 2 way Firewall?

And is there a free one for Vista?

Thank you

lucas1985
January 26th, 2008, 05:54 PM
-{ Quote: "What exactly is a 2 way Firewall?" }-
A firewall that monitors both inbound and outbound connections, binding packets to applications.
-{ Quote: "
I use the Vista built in Firewall.

But I have read that it's only 1 way Firewall, and that I need a 2 way Firewall." }-
Vista built-in firewall is 2-way (not by default)

truthseeker
January 26th, 2008, 09:08 PM
So how do I get the Vista Firewall to work 2 ways?

AKAJohnDoe
January 26th, 2008, 09:14 PM
-{ Quote: "A firewall that monitors both inbound and outbound connections, binding packets to applications.

Vista built-in firewall is 2-way (not by default)" }-
Actually, the Vista Firewall is two-way by default.

It does not, however, permit auto-discovery of outgoing connections by programs; they must be discovered manually and configured manually.

lucas1985
January 26th, 2008, 10:46 PM
Thanks AKAJohnDoe :)
I stand corrected.

Espresso
January 27th, 2008, 07:21 AM
Outgoing packets are allowed by default whether you use the control panel or the Advanced Firewall interface.

Diver
January 27th, 2008, 12:08 PM
The vista firewall in the outbound filtering mode is mainly designed to enforce IT policy. It will not pass many leak tests, if that is what you are worried about. Despite all the noise about leak tests, I believe them to be of dubious value.

AKAJohnDoe
January 27th, 2008, 03:27 PM
Actually, my PC passed the GRC tests with only Vista Firewall active. However, I really prefer a firewall that provides an easy interface into program blocking for connections, incoming and outgoing. And that is certainly not the Windows Firewall. As examples of program blocking: the various instances of Windows Media Player and that oddball SPOOLSV.EXE.

FadeAway
January 27th, 2008, 03:59 PM
-{ Quote: "...Despite all the noise about leak tests, I believe them to be of dubious value." }-

I share that opinion. If you do some searching you will find that
many technically experienced members don't even use out-bound protection
from a firewall, or if they do, it's not out of concern for leak tests.

It seems to be a debate about personal preference based upon individual
experience.

AKAJohnDoe
January 27th, 2008, 05:22 PM
-{ Quote: "I share that opinion. If you do some searching you will find that
many technically experienced members don't even use out-bound protection
from a firewall, or if they do, it's not out of concern for leak tests.

It seems to be a debate about personal preference based upon individual
experience." }-
Agreed. I do use outbound (or, more correctly, Program) protection, but for specific programs and reasons, not for protection against some nebulous or euphemistic "leak".

Stijnson
January 28th, 2008, 03:02 AM
-{ Quote: "Actually, my PC passed the GRC tests with only Vista Firewall active. However, I really prefer a firewall that provides an easy interface into program blocking for connections, incoming and outgoing. And that is certainly not the Windows Firewall. As examples of program blocking: the various instances of Windows Media Player and that oddball SPOOLSV.EXE." }-

Spoolsv.exe always freaks me out too -:)
From which firewall is this screenshot taken AKAJohnDoe?

lucas1985
January 28th, 2008, 12:06 PM
I guess it's Zone Alarm.

AKAJohnDoe
January 28th, 2008, 12:47 PM
You are correct. It is ZoneAlarm AntiVirus on Vista.