system
7
OK, thanks for the clarification, but it actually quarantined it rather than leave it in place.
I can understand the reasoning behind the policy, sort of, but it is disconcerting to think that the end user can’t be trusted by Avast! to make decisions about what runs or what goes to quarantine. If it had been an essential systems driver instead of a third party application program I’d probably be typing this on my Ubuntu laptop now. In my experience most ‘malware’ flagged by anti-malware or AV’s are false positives. I know they are inevitable in any AV program but there needs to be some safeguards. In Panda Free 2015 there was a choice to uncheck the default auto-quarantining of possible malware. This ability saved millions, including myself, from a severely borked computer during the recent great Panda borking event caused by a bad update signature. The ultimate irony here is that I changed my Win 7 desktop to Avast!, as I had had good experiences with it before on my Vista laptop, and because Panda Free 2016 did exactly the same thing with FotoSketcher a few weeks ago on the Win 7 machine! It was a false positive then as well. I thought I would have more control with Avast! Free.
I’ve seen DeepScreen pop-ups and it definitely wasn’t one of those.