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Thread: Antivirus for Win98

  1. #11
    Virus Guy Guest

    Re: Antivirus for Win98

    Mike Easter wrote:

    > > Since Win 98 and/or Win 98 SE includes IE6 Browser,

    >
    > I strongly recommend that a W98se user not use the primitive and
    > highly insecure browser IE6 SP1, the most recent v. of IE6 which
    > W98 can use.


    Win-98 runs exactly the same version of IE6-sp1 as does Win-2K.

    And because Microsoft is still supporting win-2K, they are also
    releasing IE6-SP1 rollup patches and fixes for it.

    And those same rollup files have been applied by many win-98 users since
    the "official" end of win-98 support back in July 2006.

    Win-98 users should not be using IE6 for the same reasons that Win-2K or
    XP users should not be using IE6 - because it's a horrible browser that
    breaks many web standards. Firefox 2.0.0.20 is the last FF version to
    run on un-modified win-98 systems, and it's a far better browser (as far
    as page-rendering goes) then IE6, and has been for the past 2 or 3
    years.

    The use of KernelEx helper on win-98 systems allow those systems to
    install and run many apps that are marked as "2k or XP only", such as
    Firefox 3.x and many others.

    Also note that Norton AntiVirus 2002 is a satisfactory (if not
    preferrable) AV app for win-98. Contrary to what is stated on
    Symantec's website, NAV 2002 can be updated via the "Symantec
    Intelligent Updater" package (last time I looked it was 70 mb in size).
    This will update both the scan engine DLL's and virus signature files.

    The bloat that NAV became known for did not really start until the 2003
    version, and became progressively worse each year after that.

  2. #12
    Poutnik Guest

    Re: Antivirus for Win98

    In article <4BC3EFA6.17FC7CE4@Guy.com>, Virus@Guy.com says...
    >
    > Win-98 runs exactly the same version of IE6-sp1 as does Win-2K.
    >
    > And because Microsoft is still supporting win-2K, they are also
    > releasing IE6-SP1 rollup patches and fixes for it.
    >
    > And those same rollup files have been applied by many win-98 users since
    > the "official" end of win-98 support back in July 2006.
    >

    But support and updates for W2K ends in July 2010....

    --
    Poutnik
    The best depends on how the best is defined.

  3. #13
    occam Guest

    Re: Antivirus for Win98

    On 11/04/2010 01:18, Mike Easter wrote:
    > siljaline wrote:
    >
    >> Since Win 98 and/or Win 98 SE includes IE6 Browser,

    >
    > I strongly recommend that a W98se user not use the primitive and highly
    > insecure browser IE6 SP1, the most recent v. of IE6 which W98 can use.
    >


    The OP is using Firefox, so IE-6 is not the only issue.
    I was happily using a Kaspersky [not free] on Win98, before I
    decommissioned the PC. However I havre seen free versions of Kaspersky
    (version 6) offered by AOL?
    http://forum.kaspersky.com/index.php?showtopic=19410

  4. #14
    Mike Easter Guest

    Re: Antivirus for Win98

    occam wrote:
    > Mike Easter wrote:
    >> siljaline wrote:
    >>
    >>> Since Win 98 and/or Win 98 SE includes IE6 Browser,

    >> I strongly recommend that a W98se user not use the primitive and highly
    >> insecure browser IE6 SP1, the most recent v. of IE6 which W98 can use.
    >>

    >
    > The OP is using Firefox,


    Presumably you are referring to this information about the gecko engine
    from the OP's headers:

    User-Agent: Mozilla/5.0 (Windows; U; Windows NT 5.1; en-US; rv:1.8.1.11)
    Gecko/20071127 Firefox/2.0.0.11

    I don't know exactly how to interpret that. He didn't post that message
    with FF 2.0.0.11, but for some reason the user-agent was announced
    differently in his headers than Tbird does -- perhaps that means that he
    is using a moz suite such as SeaMonkey.


    --
    Mike Easter

  5. #15
    Mike Easter Guest

    Re: Antivirus for Win98

    Mike Easter wrote:
    > occam wrote:


    >> The OP is using Firefox,


    > User-Agent: Mozilla/5.0 (Windows; U; Windows NT 5.1; en-US; rv:1.8.1.11)
    > Gecko/20071127 Firefox/2.0.0.11


    > perhaps that means that he
    > is using a moz suite such as SeaMonkey.


    Also, that win nt 5.1 is XP not W98, so he isn't posting to this group
    with a native W98 rig.


    --
    Mike Easter

  6. #16
    Virus Guy Guest

    Re: Antivirus for Win98

    Poutnik wrote:

    > > And because Microsoft is still supporting win-2K, they are also
    > > releasing IE6-SP1 rollup patches and fixes for it.

    >
    > But support and updates for W2K ends in July 2010....


    And the emergence of new threats against IE6 will also end in July 2010
    because so too will examination and public disclosure of new
    vulnerabilities.

    Not that win-98 is actually vulnerable to many of the IE6
    vulnerabilities that *have* been disclosed and patched for IE6 for the
    past 6 years.

  7. #17
    Henry Guest

    Re: Antivirus for Win98

    Mike Easter wrote:
    > Mike Easter wrote:
    >
    >> occam wrote:

    >
    >
    >>> The OP is using Firefox,

    >
    >
    >> User-Agent: Mozilla/5.0 (Windows; U; Windows NT 5.1; en-US;
    >> rv:1.8.1.11) Gecko/20071127 Firefox/2.0.0.11

    >
    >
    >> perhaps that means that he is using a moz suite such as SeaMonkey.

    >
    >
    > Also, that win nt 5.1 is XP not W98, so he isn't posting to this group
    > with a native W98 rig.
    >
    >

    No I'm posting from a WinXP Pro SP2 machine. Also, I'm using Mozilla
    1.1.17 but uning an agent switcher which makes it look like
    Firefox/2.0.0.11

    Hope this clears that up.

    Henry

  8. #18
    Poutnik Guest

    Re: Antivirus for Win98

    In article <4BC519B6.FC98EE7E@Guy.com>, Virus@Guy.com says...
    >
    > Poutnik wrote:
    >
    > >
    > > But support and updates for W2K ends in July 2010....

    >
    > And the emergence of new threats against IE6 will also end in July 2010
    > because so too will examination and public disclosure of new
    > vulnerabilities.
    >

    In general, not affecting just Windows:

    Aside of publicly dislosed vulnerabilities,
    there are plenty of not publicly disclosed vulnerabilities.
    Some of them are published even more than a year after disclosing.

    Far from all vulnerabilities are diclosed by SW vendors.
    Being not supported makes a product in fact more vulnerable.
    If you close eyes, you are not less vulnerable to violent people.


    --
    Poutnik
    The best depends on how the best is defined.

  9. #19
    Virus Guy Guest

    Re: Antivirus for Win98

    Poutnik wrote:

    > > > But support and updates for W2K ends in July 2010....

    > >
    > > And the emergence of new threats against IE6 (sp1) will also end
    > > in July 2010 because so too will examination and public
    > > disclosure of new vulnerabilities.

    >
    > Aside of publicly dislosed vulnerabilities, there are plenty
    > of non publicly disclosed vulnerabilities.


    The exploits that you see widely circulated and used are the result of
    public disclosure. This disclosure frequently happens within days of,
    or at the same time as the patch or fix being made available by the
    vendor.

    Hackers and "exploiters" usually do not conduct their own vulnerability
    research, but instead rely on public disclosure and then quickly code
    their exploits for mass distribution.

    The end of IE6-SP1 support will mark the end of third-party
    vulnerability investigation and the rewards that come with it (yes,
    people get rewarded for telling vendors about the vulnerabilities they
    discover). With the end of this vulnerability investigation will also
    come the end of new exploits, because hackers will also drop their focus
    on IE6-SP1.

    There are probably lots of XP machines still running IE6-SP2, but MS
    will still be supplying patches for that for some time. But IE6-SP2 is
    somewhat different (code-wise) than IE6-SP1, and most likely any
    exploits written for SP2 will not function properly against SP1, and
    even moreso against IE6-SP1 running on a win-98 system.

  10. #20
    David H. Lipman Guest

    Re: Antivirus for Win98

    From: "Virus Guy" <Virus@Guy.com>

    | Poutnik wrote:

    >> > > But support and updates for W2K ends in July 2010....
    >> >
    >> > And the emergence of new threats against IE6 (sp1) will also end
    >> > in July 2010 because so too will examination and public
    >> > disclosure of new vulnerabilities.


    >> Aside of publicly dislosed vulnerabilities, there are plenty
    >> of non publicly disclosed vulnerabilities.


    | The exploits that you see widely circulated and used are the result of
    | public disclosure. This disclosure frequently happens within days of,
    | or at the same time as the patch or fix being made available by the
    | vendor.

    | Hackers and "exploiters" usually do not conduct their own vulnerability
    | research, but instead rely on public disclosure and then quickly code
    | their exploits for mass distribution.

    | The end of IE6-SP1 support will mark the end of third-party
    | vulnerability investigation and the rewards that come with it (yes,
    | people get rewarded for telling vendors about the vulnerabilities they
    | discover). With the end of this vulnerability investigation will also
    | come the end of new exploits, because hackers will also drop their focus
    | on IE6-SP1.

    | There are probably lots of XP machines still running IE6-SP2, but MS
    | will still be supplying patches for that for some time. But IE6-SP2 is
    | somewhat different (code-wise) than IE6-SP1, and most likely any
    | exploits written for SP2 will not function properly against SP1, and
    | even moreso against IE6-SP1 running on a win-98 system.

    Hackers and "exploiters" usually do indeed conduct vulnerability research.

    When they do the malicious actors disclose the information it is in the black world
    outside of public view but avalable, maybe at a price, to the hacker and malware
    community.


    --
    Dave
    http://www.claymania.com/removal-trojan-adware.html
    Multi-AV - http://www.pctipp.ch/downloads/dl/35905.asp



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