Yes, you'd be fine with NOD32 alone. In fact, I'd recommend it. Eset's firewall won't offer you much - you'd be saving yourself money and resources.
PC Tools Firewall is great. It's light weight, based on Look 'n' Stop (I think it's a pro :)), and works very well without configuration. I...
Alex is correct.
GetKeyState() is an API for retrieving the status of a key; on MSDN. Not sure if this is what you were looking for. :)
I suggest you build your own. Otherwise, BEAST Computers is good.
PC Tools' antivirus is very decent, but I'd say it's unstable for long-term use due to being bought out by Symantec.
Awesome presentation indeed, I finished watching the whole thing a few hours ago. Some interesting statistics about the consumer and corporate AV...
I've always loved Shadow Defender... as soon as I get a new computer I can use to myself, it's going on immediately. :D
Nice improvements. I'll probably give it another try later down the road.
You don't seem to be really aware of Matt's testing, he uses thousand(s) of samples and has been personally contacted by Sunbelt and F-Secure.
Avast did get a better score in the latest AV-Comparatives than Kaspersky. 8)
13 processes. Browsing and listening to music, could easily be slimmed down to below 10.
Since Sandboxie doesn't allow drivers, that eliminates some keyloggers. Otherwise, yes, keyloggers will function in the sandbox (until you empty...
You can setup Sandboxie so that new keyloggers can't live.
Great, you tested one API - now don't jump to conclusions based on that, or you could even use the screenshot function in Zemana's test.
Although common keylogging techniques have failed from testing thus far in a Linux virtual machine, it doesn't mean all fail. There are TONS of...
Bloated, GUI is cluttered, bad codec and file extension support (by default), and inferior decoders (by default). Also, they threw in a bunch of...
Uninstall one of them. Whether or not both of them are allowing Avast to connect, there will be conflict and problems.
Which draft do you use?
Most HIPSs detect DLL injection (injection would be the right term). I'm not sure if there's a specific utility dedicated to it, though. :)
It's easy for me on test machines: no Windows update, IE6, search for pr0n, warez, etc, and download blatant malware from P2P. MalwareBytes'...
Both, really. I've gone from security suites, to seperate products, to "hardcore" no blacklisting, and back to all of them on different occasions.
Audio: Foobar2000 Video: VCL Media Player Why did you have to go wrong, Winamp. :(
"Collapsing the gap with on-demand, real-time malware."
I'd say get rid of ThreatFire and Zemana.
Separate names with a comma.