Anti-Virus and Malware Protection
Posted: Wed Mar 25, 2009 2:47 pm
I was working onthis at work and cut and paste it here as an FYI regarding Anti-virus and malware products, regarding the April Fools Worm.
AVG is good and it's free, I also run the Malwarebytes simultaniously, we use it at work and it catches a lot that our Anti-virus suite does not (Kaspersky, which is highly rated).
On another note:
We did a lot of research into the April Fools virus and it appears to be quite a serious worm. It is one of the newest pieces of malware and utilizes a lot of design features to ensure that once it is installed, it stays installed. The software registers hundreds of domain names each day and then selectively activates these domains to provide an update source for the worm. This allows it to continue updating itself because the source of update is always changing. Currently Kaspersky does not have a specific fix to this threat, however they have cracked the algorithm for which domain names the worm is registering and which are likely to become active providing at least a little protection. The main threat of this virus is its mysterious inactivity. It will not become active till April Fool’s Day and its effects have yet to be revealed.
Microsoft released a patch back in late October/early November that was intended to fix the flaw in remote services that allows Conficker A, B or C(the technical name for this worm) to operate. Since it was a critical security update, most computers should have it. There are those, however, who I am sure do not have all of the latest updates. It is important that every computer is updated to the fullest extent.
On another note, I was running an update at home for SuperAntiSpyware and I noticed they added in protection for new variants of the VUNDO Trojan. I am trying to figure out a way to schedule automated runs similar to what I did for Malewarebytes, but I have yet to find a method. Still it may be a good idea to consider the widespread implementation of this spyware software to be used in combination with Malwarebytes and your anti-virus suite. It may seem a little crazy on spyware, but for most severe infections I have encountered in the past, it has always taken both Malwarebytes and SuperAntiSpyware to get rid of them.
http://www.superantispyware.com/
http://www.malwarebytes.org/
http://www.free-av.com/
AVG is good and it's free, I also run the Malwarebytes simultaniously, we use it at work and it catches a lot that our Anti-virus suite does not (Kaspersky, which is highly rated).
On another note:
We did a lot of research into the April Fools virus and it appears to be quite a serious worm. It is one of the newest pieces of malware and utilizes a lot of design features to ensure that once it is installed, it stays installed. The software registers hundreds of domain names each day and then selectively activates these domains to provide an update source for the worm. This allows it to continue updating itself because the source of update is always changing. Currently Kaspersky does not have a specific fix to this threat, however they have cracked the algorithm for which domain names the worm is registering and which are likely to become active providing at least a little protection. The main threat of this virus is its mysterious inactivity. It will not become active till April Fool’s Day and its effects have yet to be revealed.
Microsoft released a patch back in late October/early November that was intended to fix the flaw in remote services that allows Conficker A, B or C(the technical name for this worm) to operate. Since it was a critical security update, most computers should have it. There are those, however, who I am sure do not have all of the latest updates. It is important that every computer is updated to the fullest extent.
On another note, I was running an update at home for SuperAntiSpyware and I noticed they added in protection for new variants of the VUNDO Trojan. I am trying to figure out a way to schedule automated runs similar to what I did for Malewarebytes, but I have yet to find a method. Still it may be a good idea to consider the widespread implementation of this spyware software to be used in combination with Malwarebytes and your anti-virus suite. It may seem a little crazy on spyware, but for most severe infections I have encountered in the past, it has always taken both Malwarebytes and SuperAntiSpyware to get rid of them.
http://www.superantispyware.com/
http://www.malwarebytes.org/
http://www.free-av.com/