Friday, November 19, 2010

AVG ANTIVIRUS USERS WATCH OUT!! WITH THE FREE TRIAL VERSIONS

AVG Antivirus is fairly popular due to its reputation as a "free" antivirus program. The truth is there is no such ting as a free ride.
AVG Antivirus is a poor performer in detecting and removing viruses, in fact it stands out as one of the worst of the more popular programs. Furthermore, AVG Antivirus gets paid by inserting an ad for itself at the bottom of all outgoing email messages. If you don't want ads in your email, but you still want to use AVG Antivirus, your option is the AVG Antivirus Professional edition, currently sold at $39.95, or a different program. Beware that some features in the Pro version is not available in the adware version. Those are: - Basic user Interface only (Pro version has Advanced user Interface) - Disabled Advanced Scheduling of Tests (Pro version has Advanced Scheduling) - Disabled Creating of Your Own Tests
NOTE: The adware edition is not available for most users from European countries. AVG checks which country you're from before you're allowed to download the software. You can bypass this by using a proxy server based in America.
AVG Antivirus doesn't scan several of the most common archive formats, whether those files are single level, nested or self-extracting archives. We are also worried by the fact that if AVG Antivirus detects an infected file, it doesn't continue to check the rest of the file for any additional viruses.
A final warning about AVG Antivirus:
According to the vendors website the free edition is only updated once a month! You might think this is good enough. Think again. Every month hundreds of new viruses emerges, flooding the internet. Those viruses are known as ITW-viruses (in the wild/commonly spread viruses). Users who don't have the opportunity to update their antivirus software at least on a weekly bases, are left completely unprotected from all those viruses, - until an update is available.

It's important to be aware of the fact that antivirus software has a very limited ability to detect new and unknown viruses, they usually detects between 15% and 50%. Testing has put AVG Antivirus in the lower range, with only a 15%-20% detection rate.
AVG Antivirus is the only decent free antivirus program available, but unfortunately it's far from good enough. Our advice: Don't listen to friends or fellow net users praising AVG Antivirus. Stay away if you're serious about staying protected.

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