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Date: | Sun, 26 May 1996 08:58:06 -0400 |
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Jerry J Bromenshenk wrote:
>
> Hi: Having discovered the first IBM boot sector virus on the UM campus,
> I had to become a sort of overnight expert. Viruses are pesky and are
> being produced at such a fast rate t ven the best anti-virus programs
> may miss some. A good example is a nasty bit of work called the INT-10
> virus that keeps popping up on our sister campus. It really does a job
> on hard disks. First time it appeared (about 1 yr ago) we tried six
> anti-virus programs. One found INT-10 but could not fix it, one was able to
> detect and fix it, and four totally missed it.
>
> Norton puts out a good product. We use Norton and one other program,
> which is either available for free or for a very minimal charge. The
> program is called F-Prot. One of our compyuter gurus says the author of
> F-Prot is a world class security expert. Over the years, F-Prot has found
> more viruses than any other program that I have used, public domain or
> commercial.
>
> It certainly is a best buy. Look for it on the web, you can get it via
> an FTP site.
Can't disagree with you there! I have F-Prot Professional Version, McAfee Virus Scan and Norton Anti-Virus.
Am currently using Norton, switched from McAfee to Norton a couple of weeks ago. PCMagazine tested all known virus' that are wild and zoo
varieties. Zoo varities are ones t xist, but have never made it outside labs.
Norton Anti-Virus won Editors Choice in their article, and caught more virus' than either F-Prot or Virus Scan.
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