Antivirus apps
Last updated
Last updated
You must not rely solely on one antivirus application; nor should you rely entirely upon antivirus software to protect you.
Several times, I have had to chase a virus around my computer, uncovering scripts, tasks in Task Scheduler, the Registry, fake driver entries, and powershell & cmd processes.
Even after all that, and using Windows Security (which detected virus files and quarantined them!), Kaspersky still managed to find more malicious code hiding in the RAM.
Kaspersky Antivirus — you can get a free 30-day trial with each new account. You can make unlimited new accounts by using email aliases. For Gmail, do this by simply adding a + after your email username, and whatever letters you like. E.g. hello+kspsk01@gamil.com, then after 30 days, hello+kspsk02@gamil.com, etc.
Kaspersky is the best AV I've found so far. It actually scans the whole system deeply, INCLUDING scanning the RAM for malicious code: many viruses are programmed to hide themselves in the RAM, making it impossible for you to delete them — they will always return after a reboot.
Windows Security isn't too bad these days, it finds most malicious code. You should still use Kaspersky occasionally, and especially if you are suspicious.
MalwareBytes seems to be good too. Check it out.
Learn more about viruses and antivirus software on 📄Antivirus apps.
This is the same information as found on the Quick Setup Guides page.
Choose an antivirus application.
I recommend Kaspersky and MalwareBytes.
I mainly recommend Kaspersky, but you need to keep creating a new account every 30 days, or you can just pay for it.
Windows Security does a decent job too, but it isn't perfect. Use it alongside another app.
Download 🌐Kaspersky FREE TRIAL[^1] — (compare their plans)
Download 🌐MalwareBytes
Register for a Kaspersky account if you choose that. I do recommend it because it's the only antivirus app that managed to find the ransomware malware hiding in my RAM.
Install the antivirus software.
Kaspersky has a more-involved setup procedure because you have to sign in to your account.
Run the antivirus scans.
Most antivirus apps have a "quick scan" and a "full scan".
You should run both.
Start with the "quick scan" because that will scan the most likely locations that a virus is hanging out, and it will find it quickly if it is there.
Then run a "full scan". This will scan everything but it will take ages.
Windows Security — double check it
If you are using Windows, go into your Windows Security application.
Double check your scan settings — one virus that I recently had had set Windows Security's antivirus scanning to exclude the entire system C: drive from its scans! The virus was able to go undetected because of this.
Your Exclusions list MUST look like this: