It is the process for the new Behavior Shield component. In the next update, it will have the appropriate description already. Identity Protection is the legacy name that was left there by accident.
I look at my task manager and find the filename, and the explanation “Identity Protection Service,” and I’m concerned. I see something I didn’t sign up for. I bother with malware protection in the first place because I care about my system’s health. There’s no value in snarky remarks from the experts. If we had time to be experts, we’d be in the expert business. We have other things to occupy our time and minds, but we still care enough to do our homework, and find this occasionally helpful site. Helpful comments are appreciated; looking down your nose at us won’t earn you any more credit than it does in your social circles.
The main reason people get concerned is when they face something unexpected in familiar places.
Like seeing some aswidsagenta.exe in process monitor or flagged by the 3rd party firewall for the first time, when it trying to access internet - yes, some people do use the 3rd party firewalls, and, no, I am not suggesting, advertising 3rd party firewalls.
And the person asked if this aswidsagenta.exe can be disabled or, more specifically, is safe to disable without really compromising the status person had prior to introduction of this new component (or revamping of the old one, whatever the case).
Instead some of you went to lengthy and useless discussions of naming your software components more user-friendly, telling everyone off to go search the forums and press-releases and whatnot - do you really expect the Regular Joe to do all that and read all your blogs, forums, etc. when your software does its work without any problems?
The thing is, what was written two pages later really shows the component that has to do with the question and even after that you still can’t contain yourself: “Why are you concerned, it’s one of the Avast shields that’s keeping you safe”. Why not adding “, dummy!” to the end of this phrase to really tell them, what you think?
So you asked for help, I assume you’ve now gotten your answer and instead of a simple thanks,
you jump to conclusions. No one ever called you a dummy. You would have been one if you hadn’t asked a
question about something that concerned you.
I just wish I had known it was part of the Antivirus as there is nothing about the name that would tell me up front. I had to look it up online. I looked it up because it as causing a bottleneck on my HDD…
This message would only be pertinent if the behavior shield was installed and turned off, but since the component is removed, it should not show an exclamation mark in the taskbar icon nor should it show this message.
I had to disable the behavior shield because I suspect that it was causing msvcr70.dll crashes on an old game I play.
Bob since this is about ‘Avast for Business’, I just wonder if this available to Pavel125 or would Pavel125 be better posting this in the Avast For Business / Avast Endpoint Protection sub-forum .