MSE 4

Discussion in 'other anti-virus software' started by stratoc, Apr 24, 2012.

  1. Kerodo

    Kerodo Registered Member

    That probably has more to do with YOU than MSE. :)
     
  2. kupo

    kupo Registered Member

    Unlikely? lol. There are many cases that a bad signature update will cause weird things in the OS.
    Okay, but similar to Daveski17, I haven't been infected even once in my time running MSE.
    And so is other AV's.
     
  3. Hungry Man

    Hungry Man Registered Member

    I think they do.

    On the one hand there are multibillion dollar corporations like Sophos that are entirely dedicated to security research. That's their entire business, so you could definitely make the argument based on that that AV companies are more equipped to deal with security.

    But... Microsoft has the source code. They know the inner mechanism of the software. All of that encapsulated code that AVs can only access through documented APIs are free to be seen by the MSE team (or at least I assume.) That's a big advantage but it's more theoretical.

    I'd say that:
    1) Microsoft is the only company that can truly secure its OS.
    2) Microsoft is not doing a good job and they should have developed a security model that works before implementing Patch Guard.
     
  4. marc57

    marc57 Registered Member

  5. Hungry Man

    Hungry Man Registered Member

    I assume the AVs are kept entirely up to date there?
     
  6. toxinon12345

    toxinon12345 Registered Member

    In fact, Generic signatures are "enhanced signatures" because of the wildcard support, which tell the scanner to ignore some sequence of bytes not common to all the family's members.

    “Generic detection” is a term applied when
    the scanner looks for a number of known
    variants, using a search string or pattern that can detect all of the variants. While it may detect a
    currently unknown variant in which the same search string can be found, it’s only a heuristic
    detection if it involves the use of a scoring mechanism(like heuristic calculation). Otherwise it’s really a special case
    of virus-specic detection. Some systems use a hybrid approach, where a scoring system
    is added to the generic detection capabilities to give a probability of the variance or family
    membership with difering degrees of certainty. For instance, if the similarity is close enough,
    the scanner may report “a variant of x,” or if less sure, it may report “probably a variant of x”.
     
    Last edited: May 28, 2012
  7. Hungry Man

    Hungry Man Registered Member

    All it means is that instead of looking for an exact match heuristics looks for a close match.

    Generic detection = heuristics. It's just problem solving with "best guesses" instead of exact answers.

    So if you have a generic signature for the Vundo family and it drops a vundo.exe in /appdata/ your "generic signature" will go nuts when uvndo.exe gets dropped in /appdata/ (oversimplification.)
     
  8. Daveski17

    Daveski17 Registered Member

    Maybe, either way, I have faith in MSE. Otherwise I would use something else. There are viable alternatives.
     
  9. Daveski17

    Daveski17 Registered Member

  10. Macstorm

    Macstorm Registered Member

    Lucky you, congrats.
     
  11. Kerodo

    Kerodo Registered Member

    I use it too. MSE and Panda Cloud are the only free ones I'll touch nowadays. I have friends who say MSE has missed things now and then, but I have had good luck with it.
     
  12. Daveski17

    Daveski17 Registered Member

    It's probably not luck. I'm just not that lucky. What was that percentage of detection rates did MSE have now? Do I hear 98%?
     
  13. Daveski17

    Daveski17 Registered Member

    I've used the Panda Cloud (freeware) & I thought it was very good, apart from the false positives. That's another thing I like about MSE, very few f-ps.
     
  14. Kerodo

    Kerodo Registered Member

    That's true. MSE has very few FP's. I haven't had any probs with Panda either. For me, both have been good.
     
  15. Daveski17

    Daveski17 Registered Member

    I haven't used Panda for about 18 months, no doubt they've improved it. Which is good to know. It was the lightest AV I have ever used.
     
  16. Macstorm

    Macstorm Registered Member

    Westcoastlabs? gimme a break! 98% above Avira 95% ..rotfl. Then I'm from Mars, sorry. Case closed.
     
  17. RejZoR

    RejZoR Lurker

    This would be even more valid for behavior blocker. I mean, they made the OS, they know whats normal and what's not. Where others have to use almost trial and error to make one...
     
  18. Daveski17

    Daveski17 Registered Member

    MSE has done consistently well on more than a couple of tests. Why would these guys lie?

    ~Image removed. See https://www.wilderssecurity.com/showthread.php?t=19950 ~

    I hear the weather's nice this time of the year on Mars. Your retro rockets are obviously not firing. Case closed.
     
    Last edited by a moderator: May 29, 2012
  19. toxinon12345

    toxinon12345 Registered Member

    Well, MSE is not intended for patching vulnerabilities in the OS, but it can detect exploits
     
  20. izi

    izi Registered Member

  21. Baserk

    Baserk Registered Member

    ^ Or you can use Task Scheduler.
    On the right panel click 'Create Basic Task', enter a description (MSE update); 'Trigger' ; Daily; 'Action'; Start a program; in 'Program/Script' enter: ...Program Files\Microsoft Security Essentials\MpCmdRun.exe; in 'Add arguments' enter: -SignatureUpdate.
    Click Finish. Wala.
     
  22. zip

    zip Registered Member

    I'm not comfortable with MSE updating once a day or less, so I teamed MSE with Immunet.
     
  23. william1955

    william1955 Registered Member

    You can easily change signature update interval of MSE.

    1. Open up the Registry Editor
    2. Go to HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE/SOFTWARE/Microsoft/Microsoft
    Antimalware/Signature Updates.
    3. Right click on Signature Updates, click Permissions, then Advanced.
    4. Go to the Owner tab, click on the Administrators group and click OK.
    5. Go back at the Permissions window, check the box labelled “Full Control”
    while the Administrator’s group is selected.
    6. Double click on the SignatureUpdateInterval key, and change the number
    to something between 1 and 24.
    This will be the number of hours it waits to check for a new update
    (the default being 24).
    7. Once you’ve done so, you can change the permissions back
    (where SYSTEM owns the key and Administrators do not have full
    control).
    Above procedure is for Windows 7.
    Procedure for Windows XP is easier, because you need not change
    ownership and/or control of registry node.

    Best regards.
    William
     
  24. Mops21

    Mops21 Registered Member

  25. PnP

    PnP Registered Member

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