To be fair, the built in Windows Defender is literally the best one there is. Everything else is maleware.
Except when Windows Defender just goes ahead and deletes my steam_api64.dll’s. That parts pretty fucked.
Truth be told I’ve been raw dogging the whole piracy thing for a while now, I haven’t had an active anti virus since 2014. I once got a virus close to 20 years ago when I discovered limewire. Never had an issue since then though.
That’s exactly why you tell Defender to keep their greedy fingers out of specific folders and install specific things to dedicated paths.
Let Defender do its thing protecting critical system paths and don’t run any executables you don’t trust. Defender never touches anything I don’t want it to touch and runs rampant on any anomalities. This unfortunately also results in things like Tor browser being flagged and removed randomly happening sometimes. Heuristic analysis is not perfect.
Then again, unless you’ve gone through hash checks, certificate verification for signed software and in the worst case decompiling your software to make sure it doesn’t do anything fishy, you’re always taking a risk.
The Linux ecosystem arguably has way better systems in place foe software distribution than “just run this .exe, trust me bro”. But common sense goes a long way within Windows.
They are literally the reason I finally abandoned Windows completely. And I am very thankful to be on Linux without an AV slowing down my machine.
To be fair, the built in Windows Defender is literally the best one there is. Everything else is maleware.
Except when Windows Defender just goes ahead and deletes my steam_api64.dll’s. That parts pretty fucked.
Truth be told I’ve been raw dogging the whole piracy thing for a while now, I haven’t had an active anti virus since 2014. I once got a virus close to 20 years ago when I discovered limewire. Never had an issue since then though.
That’s exactly why you tell Defender to keep their greedy fingers out of specific folders and install specific things to dedicated paths.
Let Defender do its thing protecting critical system paths and don’t run any executables you don’t trust. Defender never touches anything I don’t want it to touch and runs rampant on any anomalities. This unfortunately also results in things like Tor browser being flagged and removed randomly happening sometimes. Heuristic analysis is not perfect.
Then again, unless you’ve gone through hash checks, certificate verification for signed software and in the worst case decompiling your software to make sure it doesn’t do anything fishy, you’re always taking a risk.
The Linux ecosystem arguably has way better systems in place foe software distribution than “just run this .exe, trust me bro”. But common sense goes a long way within Windows.
Windows defender also slows down your system a lot. When I have high CPU load you can bet that defender is at least 25% of that.
This is 100% the reason I disabled it. I wanted that performance god damnit