Hi :)
Norton used to be completely awesome.  Everything they did was totally amazing 
and extremely useful.  Then they became corporate and serious.  

Nowadays i use AVG or something else but still when a threat is publicised as 
being particularly nasty and i suspect one of the machines i deal with might 
have fallen foul of it i still find Symantec a good place to research into it.  

One of the first jobs of a threat is to knock-out or dodge all known security 
so any of the big and famous antivirus' is likely to useless against any decent 
threat.  Luckily most threats are fairly trivial so even the big and famous 
antivirus programs can probably deal with it.  If it's non-trivial then there 
is always the option to nuke your Bios and reinstall your OS.  Still now that 
AVG is so famous i'm starting to consider other options.  

Regards from
Tom :)  



--- On Thu, 30/8/12, webmaster-Kracked_P_P <[email protected]> wrote:

From: webmaster-Kracked_P_P <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [libreoffice-users] Rel. 3.6.1 and Norton AntiVirus
To: [email protected]
Date: Thursday, 30 August, 2012, 2:27

On 08/29/2012 08:21 PM, Dan wrote:
> Jeff Hahn wrote:
>> When I try to upgrade from 3.6.0 to 3.6.1 the Norton AntiVirus program
>> keeps deleting the upgrade as an unsafe virus. This is the first release
>> that I have had this type of problem with. Jeff
>> 
> 
>      To make sure I understand: Norton deletes the LO 3.6.1 download file?
>      Otherwise, you should not have Norton running when you install the 
>upgrade; you should not be physically connected to the Internet either.
> Disconnect from Internet, turn off anti-virus program, install LO update, 
> turn on anti-virus program. ONLY WHEN AV IS RUNNING should you reconnect to 
> the Internet.
> 
> --Dan
> 

This is not the first time I have heard of Norton stating valid install files 
were viruses or other nasties.

I never had any good luck with Norton's AV, so I use the free version of Comodo 
product[s] for my Windows machines.  I have hooked even PC repair and selling 
pro's to using it.

As for not having AV running when not online, well that is not what I would 
tell people.  An anti-virus is needed if you are offline and suddenly there is 
a trojan or other nasty kicking in and doing a number.  They can be picked up 
and not cleaned in a few ways other than being online.  I have my Ubuntu system 
picking up new things from files that I have had on my system for months and 
suddenly it detects something the AV system does not like.  If I did not have 
the AV system on 24/7, then those issues might not have been picked up.  The 
real thing is that the AV systems update their data systems, mostly, after a 
new "nasty" has been detected.  If your system has that "nasty" on it before 
that nasty has been added to your AV data system, then you will need to have 
the other parts of the AV and security system[s] on to detect the traces of it 
trying to work.  SO do not turn your computer security off.

I have had to deal with too many systems from friends and clients where they 
did not have their security on 24/7 and kept up-to-date.  Had one system that 
the AV was on but not updated in over 2 years and the guy lost a lot.



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