Who asks that? They already have AV, so is the real question "should I disable mpsvc?" or "should I pay/have newtab page hijacked instead?". The answer to first is "complicated, but doesn't matter too much, ms actually know what they're doing", answer to latter is "lol no".
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Replying to @taviso @ryanaraine and
"They already have AV." What if they have a Mac? What if they run an older version of Windows? What about mobile? Respectfully, assuming everyone has a Win 10 box (if that's what you're suggesting) is just wrong.
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Replying to @lorenzofb @taviso and
If they have a Mac... they really shouldn’t install most “AV” products out there... basic education on Mac and Gatekeeper and default system policies should be good enough.
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Replying to @aionescu @lorenzofb and
Not a Mac expert, but people manage to install malware on their Macs all the time. That's what matters: a) is it relatively easy to install malware and b) are you someone who can't really make a distinction between malware and goodware. If 'yes' to both, you're better off with AV
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Replying to @martijn_grooten @aionescu and
Get a Mac to avoid malware is bad advice.
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Replying to @ryanaraine @martijn_grooten and
Yes, and so is "install antivirus". However, "Get a ChromeOS/Win 10 S/iOS device" is very good advice.
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Replying to @taviso @martijn_grooten and
IMO, the average Mac user (college student, mom/pop, etc) needs malware protection on MacOS
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Replying to @ryanaraine @martijn_grooten and
No, antivirus doesn't work and telling people it does is misleading. If I told you I had a vaccine for salmonella so you don't have to worry if your food is cooked properly anymore, you would be pretty angry when you got hospitalized when you stopped checking.
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Replying to @taviso @ryanaraine and
How many real-world cases of data breaches started with an AV compromise?
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Replying to @lorenzofb @ryanaraine and
That's not what I'm talking about, although as you ask - we know that Antivirus exploits are actively traded, but we have no insight into their use (how could we?). I'm saying that antivirus cannot stop viruses.
2 replies 0 retweets 5 likes
An antivirus exploit is expensive, nobody is using it to pop your world of warcraft account, the economics don't work out. Spending $80k to compromise a $5 account, that's just bad math, right? Spending it to get access to a CFO's draft of 4Q results....now we're talking.
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Replying to @taviso @lorenzofb and
Yes, but I was never talking about the CFO's computer. I was talking about malware that pops your WoW account.
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Replying to @taviso @lorenzofb and
Yes AV exploits are not that common, but it does shows that the idea is fundamentally flawed.
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