a-squared Anti-Malware with avast home

if ı use a-squared Anti-Malware with avast home, this will damage the avast software?

http://www.emsisoft.com/en/software/antimalware/

Generally not, but a-squared has in the past seen a high number of FPs and I think there are better anti-spy/malware programs out there.

Ok, a-squared Anti-Malware provide antivirüs [Comprehensive PC protection against trojans, viruses, spyware, adware, worms, bots, keyloggers, rootkits and dialers.] protection, it creates a conflict?

Yes, that is the marketing blurb and what I have said comes from anecdotal information form these forums. The same is correct of there generally no problem/conflict, the same with MBAM or SAS that offer similar levels of protection.

So I have given you what I’m aware of, the choice is yours to try and find out first hand.

Hi,

On this occasion DavidRś opinion, is not his own, but based upon the hearsay of others.

Emsi has the highest detection rates in many recent independent tests and a-squared Anti-Malware is the paid product which includes the Ikarus AV engine.

For the paranoid, any number of on-demand scanners may be used including a-squared Free.

Have a look on the Emsi site if you wish to see details of known conflicts with their products.

I use Avast Home and a-squared Free and between them I see about one FP every six months - of course other users may see many more - but they are easily reported and usually fixed within 24 hours.

I expect Avast 5 to be a huge success but I do not like to read unjustified criticism of any competitor program.

My regards

My personal opinion and experience: a-squared gave false positives, remove registry keys that could not restore back, messed my computer that I have to restore a full partition backup. Too intrusive, too ad-push imho, again, imho.

Agreed Tech, I had the same problems, Which is why I stopped using it.

Hi,

Tech, I have read many of your posts, but I can only recall one instance when you were actually humble.

I googled ad-push to no avail. I assume you mean Emsi have been known to advertise their products (as I read Avast have), but you always do that in your signature and you have even been known to implore individual members to use that product.

You were most wise to be able to restore, but devil-may-care and otherwise foolish to delete or even quarantine without investigation. Investigation must be the watchword with any such program (even Avast) and a-squared did not automatically delete or quarantine anything - you did that.

DavidR, if I have understood properly you run Avast on-demand scans weekly, but with its on access protection that seems unnecessary (apart from any context menu type scan on one or two special purpose folders). If I were to do a wide range weekly scan I would use a-squared Free (unintrusively).

Avast Home is free and prevention is obviously better than detection or cure. With Emsi the detection rate is probably unbettered, but you would have to pay for that same level of prevention.

I suggest those of you with broadband may wish to clear your harmless cookies with CCleaner, or whatever, download http://download1.emsisoft.com/a2usb.zip, then unzip it (to your hard drive or USB stick - it will make no registry entries and all files can be deleted as and when desired). Then run a2free.exe as extensively as you please. There is no need delete or quarantine anything; you can just check. Then save the short report and perhaps post it here or in the Emsi Forum (with or without prior investigation of any flag except possibly to see if there is any identical item whitelisted or detected using Avast).

My regards

download http://download1.emsisoft.com/a2usb.zip,
65MB download that comes down at a snails pace ???

I’ll stay with avast!, CCleaner and MBAM.

Hi YoKenny,

My broadband is pretty slow but 6 times faster than yours so if you are in the backwoods and/or miles away from a telephone exchange with no realistic opportunity to upgrade your broadband connection that is unfortunate.

However, you spend a lot of time writing here and in any event you could download while you eat, sleep or whatever.

My regards

I do a regular weekly system maintenance and during that I include on-demand scans of avast, MBAM and SAS (even though I also have the Pro version), in all this takes about 10 minutes. My system is I would say highly unlikely to get infected, but it doesn’t stop me taking measures to ensure that it stays that way or at leas I get to find out.

As I said in another topic, the value of the on-demand scan in avast with its resident protection is lessoned. However, that said, during the interval between on-demand scans you receive VPS updates that haven’t been run against your system as it is. So there may be occasions where the on-demand scan will alert, as has been reported in the forums in the past.

I’m hardly in the backwoods and the telephone exchange is quite close by so I’ll let it dribble down while I read what’s hapening over at Malwarebytes forum as I am quite interested in the upcoming 1.42 update.

Which is Better? Malwarebytes’ Anti-Malware Versus A-squared Free Part 1
http://www.brighthub.com/computing/smb-security/articles/53169.aspx

Which is Better? Malwarebytes’ Anti-Malware Versus. A-squared Free Part 2
http://www.brighthub.com/computing/smb-security/articles/53170.aspx

Hi DavidR,

I certainly agree that since all your scans take only 10 minutes, I would do likewise. I also seem to recall that you do not have broadband so I would not recommend a-squared Free for your own use.

I would however be most interested to learn how deep and how wide your Avast scan is.
That is incredibly fast unless you have a particular strategy. In my case all my downloads are initially made to a folder named 1stBase so that it is easy to locate and I leave files there for months (even though many of them are copied or extracted elsewhere). I only ever do frequent on-demand context menu scans on that folder (with comprehensive Avast scans just twice a year).

I would also be interested to know how often (after updates) your Avast on-demand scans have detected anything it missed on first access.

Sometimes I used to do a pre-download check with Dr.Web Online and my downloader is set to open ClamWin for update and check after downloading. Neither of those programs have detection rates even close to a-squared and Avast, but it would be churlish of me to criticise useful free programs.

Not long ago, in another thread, we discussed Phishing Fraud and I really wish more computer users would take a lot more care. Whilst infections can and do create misery and total havoc (tested clones and backups can save the day), but phishing frauds are often as serious or more serious.

Hi YoKenny,

Then surely you can do better, but if not then there is little point in complaining.
Since you have a flare for finding articles, reports and snippets why not find and post any recent independent test reports that include a-squared, Avast and any other of your favourites.

Hi Pondus,

That was interesting and although it was a miniscule test it did seem to have objectivity.

My regards to all

Hi Pondus,

Where I read

These are excellent products and, as they are free, there is no reason not get both!

@ Mike Buxton
That isn’t 10 minutes for avast but 10 minutes for all three scans, avast, MBAM quick scan and SAS quick scan.

I never scan archives as they are inert and don’t present a risk until you unpack them and run whatever is inside and long before that the resident scanners would scan newly created files or before executables are allowed to run. So basically I run a Standard Scan (as that also runs the anti-rootkit), which is only concerned with files that are at risk of infection, would present an immediate risk if they were infected and without archives.

I don’t have a huge amount of data to scan I don’t hold lots of junk and regularly clear out stuff I don’t use.

I haven’t had an infection in all the time I have had avast, but I don’t expect to either because of the precautions I take, but it doesn’t stop me sticking to a practice I have been doing for many, many years.

If all that fails I also have a robust back-up and recovery strategy, I have used this many times over the years for various computer problems and not once to recover from a serious infection.

Some people attract viruses like a light bulb attracts moths, so if my standard practices help others great.

Hi Yokenny,

Did you read post #4 paragraph #3?

If you are unable to locate the suggested independent reports perhaps you could post back again when you have run a-squared Free so that you have something concrete to contribute to this thread.

Hi DavidR,

Thank your for your reply. Deliberate archiving sounds like a very good idea for many users and I had not thought of, or read of that use, in this context.

I imagine, perhaps wrongly, that a vast number of individual Avast users spend countless hours every day/week/year doing on-demand scans.

Yes, I did understand it was 10 minutes for all three scans and I would be interested to know roughly how many files and/or GB your Avast scan actually checks?

My regards

I ran a couple of scans after update

a-squared Free - Version 4.5
Last update: 11/11/2009 5:48:31 PM

Scan settings:

Scan type: Smart Scan
Objects: Memory, Traces, Cookies, C:\Windows, C:\Program Files (x86)
Scan archives: On
Heuristics: Off
ADS Scan: On

Scan start: 11/11/2009 5:52:18 PM

Scanned

Files: 62898
Traces: 368775
Cookies: 11
Processes: 20

Found

Files: 0
Traces: 0
Cookies: 0
Processes: 0
Registry keys: 0

Scan end: 11/11/2009 6:03:31 PM
Scan time: 0:11:13

Malwarebytes’ Anti-Malware 1.42
Database version: 3150
Windows 6.1.7600
Internet Explorer 8.0.7600.16385

11/11/2009 6:56:38 PM
mbam-log-2009-11-11 (18-56-38).txt

Scan type: Quick Scan
Objects scanned: 82740
Time elapsed: 1 minute(s), 22 second(s)

Memory Processes Infected: 0
Memory Modules Infected: 0
Registry Keys Infected: 0
Registry Values Infected: 0
Registry Data Items Infected: 0
Folders Infected: 0
Files Infected: 0

Memory Processes Infected:
(No malicious items detected)

Memory Modules Infected:
(No malicious items detected)

Registry Keys Infected:
(No malicious items detected)

Registry Values Infected:
(No malicious items detected)

Registry Data Items Infected:
(No malicious items detected)

Folders Infected:
(No malicious items detected)

Files Infected:
(No malicious items detected)

Hi YoKenny,

Thanks for that. It is interesting though the comparison is rather misleading in that a-squared tests for more than 3.3 million problems and I think your favourite program checks for less than 0.3 million problems. Nevertheless it has a good reputation for fixing the problems it can locate.

My regards

@ Mike Buxton
My routine scan shows only about 6.x GB of data scanned in about 5 minutes.