Results 1 to 10 of 43

Thread: Desktop antivirus - it's dead

Hybrid View

  1. #1
    cbgerry Guest

    Re: Desktop antivirus - it's dead

    On Apr 7, 10:35 am, Virus Guy <V...@Guy.com> wrote:
    > Far Canal wrote:
    > > Snip the same old bollocks you've posted before.

    >
    > > Here's a clue, we ain't interested

    >
    > What's your problem?
    >
    > The article is right. AV software is not catching exploits as they
    > enter the typical system via browsing, and they are not able to keep
    > up in real time with new varients. The best they can do now is alert
    > you to the odd miscellaneous leftover files that got onto your system
    > ->a month ago<-, and more and more they either can't get at access to
    > them to get rid of them, or they come back at your next start-up.


    ==========================>

    Do you know what "heurisitics" is in antivirus ? For the early years
    of 2000 on, Norton antivirus hjas always been kinown for this feature
    and as part of it's selloing feature and track record for blocking
    virtually all viruses and worms. All descent antivirus (paid
    subscription) has this and is knwon for it as whether it is rated well
    and trusted by consumers for protection choices.

    If you don't know what this is, perhaps the next time you may see the
    pop up "your antivirus has just blocked or quarantined such and such
    threat" - - - when you are browsing the web - it is a very good chance
    that is exactly waht just ocurred. Your paid antivirus protection
    using heurisitics (detecting unknown threats) has just caught and
    either deleted the severe threat as unable for it to be cleaned or
    caught and instantly deleted what serves no purpose but malicious
    intent such as a trojan.

    That can also happen when downloading email. Not the regular cleaning
    emails of threats and reports - but when there is a specific threat
    activated by simply downloading the email to your computer. That was
    "heurisitics" 99 percent of the time quarantining or immediately
    deleting the virus/worm/trojan - and that is what the pop up message
    was again - "your antivirus deleted or quarantined such and such a
    threat".

    In other words heurisitics in antivirus is half of the real time
    protection at all times 24/7 - even when the computer is shut down.


  2. #2
    cbgerry Guest

    Re: Desktop antivirus - it's dead

    On Apr 8, 5:16 pm, "cbgerry" <cbge...@bluecollarpc.net> wrote:
    > On Apr 7, 10:35 am, Virus Guy <V...@Guy.com> wrote:
    >
    > > Far Canal wrote:
    > > > Snip the same old bollocks you've posted before.

    >
    > > > Here's a clue, we ain't interested

    >
    > > What's your problem?

    >
    > > The article is right. AV software is not catching exploits as they
    > > enter the typical system via browsing, and they are not able to keep
    > > up in real time with new varients. The best they can do now is alert
    > > you to the odd miscellaneous leftover files that got onto your system
    > > ->a month ago<-, and more and more they either can't get at access to
    > > them to get rid of them, or they come back at your next start-up.

    >
    > ==========================>
    >
    > Do you know what "heurisitics" is in antivirus ? For the early years
    > of 2000 on, Norton antivirus hjas always been kinown for this feature
    > and as part of it's selloing feature and track record for blocking
    > virtually all viruses and worms. All descent antivirus (paid
    > subscription) has this and is knwon for it as whether it is rated well
    > and trusted by consumers for protection choices.
    >
    > If you don't know what this is, perhaps the next time you may see the
    > pop up "your antivirus has just blocked or quarantined such and such
    > threat" - - - when you are browsing the web - it is a very good chance
    > that is exactly waht just ocurred. Your paid antivirus protection
    > using heurisitics (detecting unknown threats) has just caught and
    > either deleted the severe threat as unable for it to be cleaned or
    > caught and instantly deleted what serves no purpose but malicious
    > intent such as a trojan.
    >
    > That can also happen when downloading email. Not the regular cleaning
    > emails of threats and reports - but when there is a specific threat
    > activated by simply downloading the email to your computer. That was
    > "heurisitics" 99 percent of the time quarantining or immediately
    > deleting the virus/worm/trojan - and that is what the pop up message
    > was again - "your antivirus deleted or quarantined such and such a
    > threat".
    >
    > In other words heurisitics in antivirus is half of the real time
    > protection at all times 24/7 - even when the computer is shut down.


    =================================</.
    Maybe from the "horse's mouth" will help:

    Excerpt: (HEURISITICS)
    http://www.symantec.com/home_homeoff...ncobetafaq.jsp


    Size matters.
    Symantec is the largest provider of security software and services to
    the consumer and enterprise market. Norton Confidential protection
    benefits from the information provided by hundreds of millions of
    users who encounter these "unknown" threats over time. Not only does
    this scale help Symantec's capability to "know" about threats earlier,
    but it helps improve the HEURISITICS engine to intelligently detect
    more "unknown" threat variants.

    What are "known" and "unknown" threats, and why is this so
    important?.....
    "Known" and "unknown" threats. A threat is "known" when a security
    software provider learns of the particular threat, analyzes it and
    develops a "signature" to protect against it. Until that time, the
    threat is considered to be "unknown." Several hours, days (or longer)
    may pass between a criminal launching a new attack and you being
    protected from it as a "known" threat.

    Protection from "unknown" threats.
    Norton Confidential is the first available solution to protect you
    from both known and unknown phishing/pharming Web sites and crimeware.
    In addition to using traditional signature-based protection from known
    threats, Norton Confidential applies sophisticated "HEURISITIC" or
    "behavior-based" technology to detect suspicious "unknown" threats
    which haven't been seen before. This type of protection is essential
    for online banking, shopping and other activities where you are
    sharing passwords, account numbers or other confidential information.

    /.End.


  3. #3
    cbgerry Guest

    Re: Desktop antivirus - it's dead

    On Apr 8, 5:16 pm, "cbgerry" <cbge...@bluecollarpc.net> wrote:
    > On Apr 7, 10:35 am, Virus Guy <V...@Guy.com> wrote:
    >
    > > Far Canal wrote:
    > > > Snip the same old bollocks you've posted before.

    >
    > > > Here's a clue, we ain't interested

    >
    > > What's your problem?

    >
    > > The article is right. AV software is not catching exploits as they
    > > enter the typical system via browsing, and they are not able to keep
    > > up in real time with new varients. The best they can do now is alert
    > > you to the odd miscellaneous leftover files that got onto your system
    > > ->a month ago<-, and more and more they either can't get at access to
    > > them to get rid of them, or they come back at your next start-up.

    >
    > ==========================>
    >
    > Do you know what "heurisitics" is in antivirus ? For the early years
    > of 2000 on, Norton antivirus hjas always been kinown for this feature
    > and as part of it's selloing feature and track record for blocking
    > virtually all viruses and worms. All descent antivirus (paid
    > subscription) has this and is knwon for it as whether it is rated well
    > and trusted by consumers for protection choices.
    >
    > If you don't know what this is, perhaps the next time you may see the
    > pop up "your antivirus has just blocked or quarantined such and such
    > threat" - - - when you are browsing the web - it is a very good chance
    > that is exactly waht just ocurred. Your paid antivirus protection
    > using heurisitics (detecting unknown threats) has just caught and
    > either deleted the severe threat as unable for it to be cleaned or
    > caught and instantly deleted what serves no purpose but malicious
    > intent such as a trojan.
    >
    > That can also happen when downloading email. Not the regular cleaning
    > emails of threats and reports - but when there is a specific threat
    > activated by simply downloading the email to your computer. That was
    > "heurisitics" 99 percent of the time quarantining or immediately
    > deleting the virus/worm/trojan - and that is what the pop up message
    > was again - "your antivirus deleted or quarantined such and such a
    > threat".
    >
    > In other words heurisitics in antivirus is half of the real time
    > protection at all times 24/7 - even when the computer is shut down.


    ==========================>
    /.End. (And don't introduce the idiotic caveman whitelisting again !
    Yeah.... let's whitelist infected programs to run idiot !)


  4. #4
    kurt wismer Guest

    Re: Desktop antivirus - it's dead

    cbgerry wrote:
    > On Apr 7, 10:35 am, Virus Guy <V...@Guy.com> wrote:
    >> Far Canal wrote:
    >>> Snip the same old bollocks you've posted before.
    >>> Here's a clue, we ain't interested

    >> What's your problem?
    >>
    >> The article is right. AV software is not catching exploits as they
    >> enter the typical system via browsing, and they are not able to keep
    >> up in real time with new varients. The best they can do now is alert
    >> you to the odd miscellaneous leftover files that got onto your system
    >> ->a month ago<-, and more and more they either can't get at access to
    >> them to get rid of them, or they come back at your next start-up.

    >
    > ==========================>
    >
    > Do you know what "heurisitics" is in antivirus ?


    unfortunately, heuristic technology is not the savior you seem to think
    it is... retrospective testing by the likes of av-comparatives.org have
    revealed that heuristics are generally not all that good at detecting
    new/unknown malware (which is the very class of malware it's supposed to
    help with)... last time i checked i think the highest detection rate was
    somewhere in the 50th percentile... of course that's better than
    nothing, but it still falls far short of the claim of detecting
    "virtually all viruses and worms" you made further on...

    > For the early years
    > of 2000 on, Norton antivirus hjas always been kinown for this feature


    2000? heuristics predate that by a rather wide margin...

    > and as part of it's selloing feature and track record for blocking
    > virtually all viruses and worms.


    someone has been filling your head with lies, i'm afraid...

    --
    "it's not the right time to be sober
    now the idiots have taken over
    spreading like a social cancer,
    is there an answer?"

  5. #5
    cbgerry Guest

    Re: Desktop antivirus - it's dead

    On Apr 8, 6:23 pm, kurt wismer <k...@sympatico.ca> wrote:
    > cbgerry wrote:
    > > On Apr 7, 10:35 am, Virus Guy <V...@Guy.com> wrote:
    > >> Far Canal wrote:
    > >>> Snip the same old bollocks you've posted before.
    > >>> Here's a clue, we ain't interested
    > >> What's your problem?

    >
    > >> The article is right. AV software is not catching exploits as they
    > >> enter the typical system via browsing, and they are not able to keep
    > >> up in real time with new varients. The best they can do now is alert
    > >> you to the odd miscellaneous leftover files that got onto your system
    > >> ->a month ago<-, and more and more they either can't get at access to
    > >> them to get rid of them, or they come back at your next start-up.

    >
    > > ==========================>

    >
    > > Do you know what "heurisitics" is in antivirus ?

    >
    > unfortunately, heuristic technology is not the savior you seem to think
    > it is... retrospective testing by the likes of av-comparatives.org have
    > revealed that heuristics are generally not all that good at detecting
    > new/unknown malware (which is the very class of malware it's supposed to
    > help with)... last time i checked i think the highest detection rate was
    > somewhere in the 50th percentile... of course that's better than
    > nothing, but it still falls far short of the claim of detecting
    > "virtually all viruses and worms" you made further on...
    >
    > > For the early years
    > > of 2000 on, Norton antivirus hjas always been kinown for this feature

    >
    > 2000? heuristics predate that by a rather wide margin...
    >
    > > and as part of it's selloing feature and track record for blocking
    > > virtually all viruses and worms.

    >
    > someone has been filling your head with lies, i'm afraid...
    >
    > --
    > "it's not the right time to be sober
    > now the idiots have taken over
    > spreading like a social cancer,
    > is there an answer?"- Hide quoted text -
    >
    > - Show quoted text -


    ============================>
    That's some expected reply. Did you know that these independent test
    centers lie and not me and they lie for illicit gain like magazines
    they sell ??? If anybody is lying it would be them and if anybody's
    head is full of it (lies) it would have to be you and not me..... and
    I will tell you why.

    This is easily going round and round - a round robin - and you are a
    part of that. If there were labrotories with all these "unknown
    threats" they use as tests to prove the weaknesses of software - any
    type of test program - it would have been stolen and used a long time
    ago by the underworld in malware spybots that are currently
    responsible for up to 70 percent of world spam and 4 percent annually
    of ID Theft in just America and are currently clocked in control of 4
    to 11 percent of world computers.

    The security industry is well aware of that and do know everything
    possible that is used by these independents and for two reasons. Are
    they attempting at some time to be running extortion by producing a
    proof-of-concept scenario. Number two - are they "selling" to the
    underground and what ? Would it surprise you that security software
    can purposely give "false readings" to test equipment for these very
    reasons ? Are you aware of anti-cracking technology that is software
    as well that can be purchased and how this protects security products
    against "probes" for reverse engineering and piracy ?

    What you are replying to basically is the part of the discussion about
    heurisitics fail maybe 50 percent of the time - even if for sake of
    arguement you might call that a worst case scenario as opposed to a
    conservative estimate. Specific products I have used for over four
    years now were Norton Antivirus - 2 years Webroot Spysweeper and Trend
    Micro Antispyware which also have heurisitics technology for spyware
    and related malware. Several times I have manually inspected every
    single file and registry entry in my computer looking for malware.
    None was ever found though I have been hit hundreds of times.

    Now according to your perspective that heuristics don't work - I
    should have found at least 150 malware applications. The hits I am
    talking about are not malwares that were removed after scans. I am
    talking about drive by installations. Were are they ? There is not so
    much as a trace present.

    You said...
    ""QUOTE""
    > someone has been filling your head with lies, i'm afraid...

    "UNQUOTE""

    ....well you can be afraid all you want but here you can stop telling
    LIES as you are doing. There is NO ONE filling my head with lies - not
    even me. What I have posted here is the truth - I don't lie where pc
    security is concerned. I do know what I am talking about and I am a
    groups owner specializing in malware removal and webmaster/creator of
    the www.BlueCollarPC.Net/ website for the same which is approaching
    one million hits by people who look towards information and advice I
    provide as a source of their computing security needs. Not one of my
    Visitors and Website Users believes I am a liar.

    Now the bottom line here is that I am positively sure you will agree
    that any traces or variants of threats from a couple of years ago
    would finally have had defintions written for them to remove them in a
    scan, that for sake of argument where "missed by heurisitics" ? Okay,
    for sake of arguement ? This is what I am telling you - there is no
    such thing. The products ARE that good.

    You had some kind of problem with the statement about these products's
    heurisitics catch virtually ALL malwares. Well they do and did. Why
    would I - me as who I am with nothing to gain - why would I lie or be
    wrong about that ? Who would believe YOU ?


  6. #6
    cbgerry Guest

    Re: Desktop antivirus - it's dead

    On Apr 8, 9:15 pm, "cbgerry" <cbge...@bluecollarpc.net> wrote:
    > On Apr 8, 6:23 pm, kurt wismer <k...@sympatico.ca> wrote:
    >
    >
    >
    >
    >
    > > cbgerry wrote:
    > > > On Apr 7, 10:35 am, Virus Guy <V...@Guy.com> wrote:
    > > >> Far Canal wrote:
    > > >>> Snip the same old bollocks you've posted before.
    > > >>> Here's a clue, we ain't interested
    > > >> What's your problem?

    >
    > > >> The article is right. AV software is not catching exploits as they
    > > >> enter the typical system via browsing, and they are not able to keep
    > > >> up in real time with new varients. The best they can do now is alert
    > > >> you to the odd miscellaneous leftover files that got onto your system
    > > >> ->a month ago<-, and more and more they either can't get at access to
    > > >> them to get rid of them, or they come back at your next start-up.

    >
    > > > ==========================>

    >
    > > > Do you know what "heurisitics" is in antivirus ?

    >
    > > unfortunately, heuristic technology is not the savior you seem to think
    > > it is... retrospective testing by the likes of av-comparatives.org have
    > > revealed that heuristics are generally not all that good at detecting
    > > new/unknown malware (which is the very class of malware it's supposed to
    > > help with)... last time i checked i think the highest detection rate was
    > > somewhere in the 50th percentile... of course that's better than
    > > nothing, but it still falls far short of the claim of detecting
    > > "virtually all viruses and worms" you made further on...

    >
    > > > For the early years
    > > > of 2000 on, Norton antivirus hjas always been kinown for this feature

    >
    > > 2000? heuristics predate that by a rather wide margin...

    >
    > > > and as part of it's selloing feature and track record for blocking
    > > > virtually all viruses and worms.

    >
    > > someone has been filling your head with lies, i'm afraid...

    >
    > > --
    > > "it's not the right time to be sober
    > > now the idiots have taken over
    > > spreading like a social cancer,
    > > is there an answer?"- Hide quoted text -

    >
    > > - Show quoted text -

    >
    > ============================>
    > That's some expected reply. Did you know that these independent test
    > centers lie and not me and they lie for illicit gain like magazines
    > they sell ??? If anybody is lying it would be them and if anybody's
    > head is full of it (lies) it would have to be you and not me..... and
    > I will tell you why.
    >
    > This is easily going round and round - a round robin - and you are a
    > part of that. If there were labrotories with all these "unknown
    > threats" they use as tests to prove the weaknesses of software - any
    > type of test program - it would have been stolen and used a long time
    > ago by the underworld in malware spybots that are currently
    > responsible for up to 70 percent of world spam and 4 percent annually
    > of ID Theft in just America and are currently clocked in control of 4
    > to 11 percent of world computers.
    >
    > The security industry is well aware of that and do know everything
    > possible that is used by these independents and for two reasons. Are
    > they attempting at some time to be running extortion by producing a
    > proof-of-concept scenario. Number two - are they "selling" to the
    > underground and what ? Would it surprise you that security software
    > can purposely give "false readings" to test equipment for these very
    > reasons ? Are you aware of anti-cracking technology that is software
    > as well that can be purchased and how this protects security products
    > against "probes" for reverse engineering and piracy ?
    >
    > What you are replying to basically is the part of the discussion about
    > heurisitics fail maybe 50 percent of the time - even if for sake of
    > arguement you might call that a worst case scenario as opposed to a
    > conservative estimate. Specific products I have used for over four
    > years now were Norton Antivirus - 2 years Webroot Spysweeper and Trend
    > Micro Antispyware which also have heurisitics technology for spyware
    > and related malware. Several times I have manually inspected every
    > single file and registry entry in my computer looking for malware.
    > None was ever found though I have been hit hundreds of times.
    >
    > Now according to your perspective that heuristics don't work - I
    > should have found at least 150 malware applications. The hits I am
    > talking about are not malwares that were removed after scans. I am
    > talking about drive by installations. Were are they ? There is not so
    > much as a trace present.
    >
    > You said...
    > ""QUOTE""> someone has been filling your head with lies, i'm afraid...
    >
    > "UNQUOTE""
    >
    > ...well you can be afraid all you want but here you can stop telling
    > LIES as you are doing. There is NO ONE filling my head with lies - not
    > even me. What I have posted here is the truth - I don't lie where pc
    > security is concerned. I do know what I am talking about and I am a
    > groups owner specializing in malware removal and webmaster/creator of
    > thewww.BlueCollarPC.Net/website for the same which is approaching
    > one million hits by people who look towards information and advice I
    > provide as a source of their computing security needs. Not one of my
    > Visitors and Website Users believes I am a liar.
    >
    > Now the bottom line here is that I am positively sure you will agree
    > that any traces or variants of threats from a couple of years ago
    > would finally have had defintions written for them to remove them in a
    > scan, that for sake of argument where "missed by heurisitics" ? Okay,
    > for sake of arguement ? This is what I am telling you - there is no
    > such thing. The products ARE that good.
    >
    > You had some kind of problem with the statement about these products's
    > heurisitics catch virtually ALL malwares. Well they do and did. Why
    > would I - me as who I am with nothing to gain - why would I lie or be
    > wrong about that ? Who would believe YOU ?- Hide quoted text -
    >
    > - Show quoted text -


    ============================>
    You are a "doomsday prophet" ???

    ....meaning there approaches or is achieved that there is no such thing
    as pc security and we should all just go back to playing
    solitaire ???

    Who in the hell is going to buy that or into it ??? I presume you
    did ??


  7. #7
    optikl Guest

    Re: Desktop antivirus - it's dead


    "cbgerry" <cbgerry@bluecollarpc.net> wrote in message
    news:1176081345.238680.19410@e65g2000hsc.googlegro ups.com...
    > ============================>

    <snippped rant>.

    You would project a more credible, coherent argument if your spelling and
    grammar weren't so awful.



  8. #8
    Peter Seiler Guest

    Re: Desktop antivirus - it's dead

    optikl - 09.04.2007 04:27 :

    > "cbgerry" <cbgerry@bluecollarpc.net> wrote in message
    > news:1176081345.238680.19410@e65g2000hsc.googlegro ups.com...
    >> ============================>

    > <snippped rant>.
    >
    > You would project a more credible, coherent argument if your spelling and
    > grammar weren't so awful.
    >
    >


    and if he would shorten his unnecessary quotings.

    --

    by(e) PS

    spam will be killfiled

  9. #9
    kurt wismer Guest

    Re: Desktop antivirus - it's dead

    cbgerry wrote:
    > On Apr 8, 6:23 pm, kurt wismer <k...@sympatico.ca> wrote:
    >> cbgerry wrote:
    >>> On Apr 7, 10:35 am, Virus Guy <V...@Guy.com> wrote:
    >>>> Far Canal wrote:
    >>>>> Snip the same old bollocks you've posted before.
    >>>>> Here's a clue, we ain't interested
    >>>> What's your problem?
    >>>> The article is right. AV software is not catching exploits as they
    >>>> enter the typical system via browsing, and they are not able to keep
    >>>> up in real time with new varients. The best they can do now is alert
    >>>> you to the odd miscellaneous leftover files that got onto your system
    >>>> ->a month ago<-, and more and more they either can't get at access to
    >>>> them to get rid of them, or they come back at your next start-up.
    >>> ==========================>
    >>> Do you know what "heurisitics" is in antivirus ?

    >> unfortunately, heuristic technology is not the savior you seem to think
    >> it is... retrospective testing by the likes of av-comparatives.org have
    >> revealed that heuristics are generally not all that good at detecting
    >> new/unknown malware (which is the very class of malware it's supposed to
    >> help with)... last time i checked i think the highest detection rate was
    >> somewhere in the 50th percentile... of course that's better than
    >> nothing, but it still falls far short of the claim of detecting
    >> "virtually all viruses and worms" you made further on...
    >>
    >>> For the early years
    >>> of 2000 on, Norton antivirus hjas always been kinown for this feature

    >> 2000? heuristics predate that by a rather wide margin...
    >>
    >>> and as part of it's selloing feature and track record for blocking
    >>> virtually all viruses and worms.

    >> someone has been filling your head with lies, i'm afraid...
    >>
    >> --
    >> "it's not the right time to be sober
    >> now the idiots have taken over
    >> spreading like a social cancer,
    >> is there an answer?"- Hide quoted text -
    >>
    >> - Show quoted text -

    >
    > ============================>


    > That's some expected reply. Did you know that these independent test
    > centers lie


    that's some claim... do you have proof to back it up?

    > and not me and they lie for illicit gain like magazines
    > they sell ???


    av-comparatives.org doesn't sell magazines...

    > If anybody is lying it would be them and if anybody's
    > head is full of it (lies) it would have to be you and not me..... and
    > I will tell you why.
    >
    > This is easily going round and round - a round robin - and you are a
    > part of that. If there were labrotories with all these "unknown
    > threats" they use as tests to prove the weaknesses of software - any
    > type of test program - it would have been stolen and used a long time
    > ago by the underworld in malware spybots that are currently
    > responsible for up to 70 percent of world spam and 4 percent annually
    > of ID Theft in just America and are currently clocked in control of 4
    > to 11 percent of world computers.


    ?? i'm finding your prose very hard to follow... are you making an
    argument against the existence of labs with collections of malware that
    is unknown to an anti-virus? if so then i would have to point out how
    retrospective testing works - they use a slightly old version of a virus
    scanner (say 3 months old) and without updating test it against viruses
    that have been discovered since it came out... these are viruses the
    product probably would detect if the product was up to date, but since
    retrospective testing tests the heuristics specifically the
    non-heuristic parts of the scanner are kept out of date so that only the
    heuristics would be able to raise an alarm...

    > The security industry is well aware of that and do know everything
    > possible that is used by these independents and for two reasons. Are
    > they attempting at some time to be running extortion by producing a
    > proof-of-concept scenario. Number two - are they "selling" to the
    > underground and what ? Would it surprise you that security software
    > can purposely give "false readings" to test equipment for these very
    > reasons ? Are you aware of anti-cracking technology that is software
    > as well that can be purchased and how this protects security products
    > against "probes" for reverse engineering and piracy ?


    ugg... it's getting harder and harder to make sense out of this... if
    you're making an argument that there's some nefarious or illicit
    ulterior motive behind the independent testers i would have to point out
    that av-comparatives.org is actually a well respected (even among the av
    vendors) independent testing organization...

    > What you are replying to basically is the part of the discussion about
    > heurisitics fail maybe 50 percent of the time - even if for sake of
    > arguement you might call that a worst case scenario as opposed to a
    > conservative estimate.


    actually 50% is the best case scenario... on average it fails even more
    than that...

    > Specific products I have used for over four
    > years now were Norton Antivirus - 2 years Webroot Spysweeper and Trend
    > Micro Antispyware which also have heurisitics technology for spyware
    > and related malware. Several times I have manually inspected every
    > single file and registry entry in my computer looking for malware.
    > None was ever found though I have been hit hundreds of times.
    >
    > Now according to your perspective that heuristics don't work - I
    > should have found at least 150 malware applications. The hits I am
    > talking about are not malwares that were removed after scans. I am
    > talking about drive by installations. Were are they ? There is not so
    > much as a trace present.


    this is a deeply flawed logical conclusion... just because heuristics
    fail doesn't mean you would find malware that heuristics has missed...

    > You said...
    > ""QUOTE""
    >> someone has been filling your head with lies, i'm afraid...

    > "UNQUOTE""
    >
    > ...well you can be afraid all you want but here you can stop telling
    > LIES as you are doing. There is NO ONE filling my head with lies


    y'know what, you're right... your point of view seems to be quite
    unique... i don't think anyone else can take credit for it...

    > - not
    > even me. What I have posted here is the truth - I don't lie where pc
    > security is concerned. I do know what I am talking about and I am a
    > groups owner specializing in malware removal and webmaster/creator of
    > the www.BlueCollarPC.Net/ website for the same which is approaching
    > one million hits by people who look towards information and advice I
    > provide as a source of their computing security needs. Not one of my
    > Visitors and Website Users believes I am a liar.


    well i never accused you of being a liar, only of being wrong...

    > Now the bottom line here is that I am positively sure you will agree
    > that any traces or variants of threats from a couple of years ago
    > would finally have had defintions written for them to remove them in a
    > scan, that for sake of argument where "missed by heurisitics" ? Okay,
    > for sake of arguement ? This is what I am telling you - there is no
    > such thing. The products ARE that good.


    retrospective testing says otherwise...

    > You had some kind of problem with the statement about these products's
    > heurisitics catch virtually ALL malwares. Well they do and did.


    retrospective testing says otherwise...

    > Why
    > would I - me as who I am with nothing to gain - why would I lie or be
    > wrong about that ?


    why would you be wrong? people are wrong all the time about all sorts of
    things... they don't generally need reasons...

    > Who would believe YOU ?


    well, it's not so much about believing me as it is about believing
    independent testing organizations that even the anti-virus vendors
    acknowledge, as well as the words of anti-virus vendors and
    professionals themselves... do a google groups search in alt.comp.virus
    (or comp.virus, come to think of it) for names like alan solomon, jimmy
    kuo, dmitry gryaznov, frisk, etc (there are actually quite a few more
    but those are the ones that immediately came to mind) and see if any of
    them claim as you do that anti-virus products detect virtually all
    malware...

    --
    "it's not the right time to be sober
    now the idiots have taken over
    spreading like a social cancer,
    is there an answer?"

Thread Information

Users Browsing this Thread

There are currently 1 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 1 guests)

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •