DavidR
3
Lets put it this way regardless of this, having an AV that could possibly be hacked, has to be better than having none at all.
An AV has to be just one line of defence in your over all security. Firewalls have been the traditional defence against network intrusion (HIPS, etc. etc.).
Even if an exploit is found, there has to be a means of targeting the system, e.g. how does it find its target, someone with that AV. That presumably has to be the same way other malware gets launched, be that hacked sites, drive by downloads, etc. and then finding out if you have an AV with a vulnerability.
When all said and done, these type of articles are fear mongers (not even sure if they are more damaging than the issue), not everyone is going to be directly targeted just because you have an AV with a supposed vulnerability.
So you have to have a robust backup and recovery strategy to be able to recover from any potential issues, be that malware or other computer issue. I have been saying this for years and this doesn’t change that, only emphasises it.