Tuesday, December 20, 2011

free cnet antivirusIs download cnet really tested virus free? Will antivirus catch keyloggers?

1. Is there a way to examine the program as you download it for a virus or keylogger?
2. Can you only check for keyloggers after you install software?
3. Do people only lose money from their bank accounts from email attachments or can be a game download?
cnet is free of viruses and if you have your anti virus software running wile you download a file it will automatically check the file for viruses. as for the email attachments you will not lose money from your bank account they can have viruses attached but that is highly unlikely, if it does have a virus then when you are opening the attachment the anti virus software will block the virus from entering your computer
Yes!
iSafe All In One keylogger can help you to monitor others facebook and IMs and keystrokes and more.
Here is some highlight features:

All-in-one-Record all computer activities, including:keystrokes,screenshots,website… surfed,Facebook,Myspace,clipboard,applic… used,USB Drive(Disk),CDRom,Printer,Documents used,2-Direction IM chatting(MSN,ICQ,AIM,Yahoo Messenger,Skype Incoming-and-Outgoing messages)...
Stealth-Work in completely Stealth(invisible,secretly) mode
Safe-All records are highly encrypted with AES 1024,no one but you can view or manage the logs
Secret-Completely self-hide. Not listed in Task Manager,Taskbar,Uninstall list and Start menu.Can not be detected by Registry clean or optimization tools or Windows' msconfig.exe
Live-Send logs timely to your Efree cnet antivirus-mail address in background
Powerful,Easy-to-Use,High Efficiency,Convenient Log-View-and-Management Tool
Life-time FREE technical Support...
Compatible with Windows 7.
You can download the keylogger for free from here:
http://www.isafesoft.com
i suggest you go to the official website of those popular keyloggers to download and purchase.
spyagent is one of the best one on the market.

1. Most AV programs scan any incoming file - be an email attachment, or a file download. A keylogger is not a virus, so no, they won't catch that.

2. You need a malware scanner, but even they may not detect it.

3. There are multiple ways to gain illegal access to your bank account. Three common methods are:
* Phish. This is an email message that looks like it was sent by your bank, and may even direct you to a website that looks like your bank's - but it isn't your bank. Often the email will say something about you needing to confirm your account by going to this website and typing in your username, password, account number, etc. The scammer owns the fake website, and just collects the data people type in, then goes to the bank's REAL website, uses your data to log into your account, and helps himself. These are easy to avoid - NEVER EVER EVER click on a link in an email - always type in the bank's address yourself. Also remember that NO bank or other website will EVER ask you for your password, or require you to "verify free cnet antivirusyour account" through the internet.

* Keylogging. An application that secretly captures keystrokes and even screenshots, before sending them to the criminal. These can be stopped by things like Zone Alarm or Norton's home defender as they do not allow unrecognized programs access the internet. The only downside is that you have to teach these programs what is and isn't an unrecognized program. And if you see one that you don't recognize, you're pretty much stuck doing the research yourself to find out if it's just a part of Windows, or something more sinister.

* Browser redirect. This is actually quite difficult to detect. This attack doesn't target your applications. Instead it attacks your computer's DNS records. DNS is the system that the computer uses to convert domain names into IP addresses. You can still use the IP address yourself, but humans generally have an easier time remembering "mybank.com" instead of something like "63.23.53.103". In this attack the criminal alters your computers DNS so that even if you type in "mybank.com" you don't actually go to the IP address belonging to the bank, but a look-alike site belonging to the criminal, similar to the phishing attack above.

This attack also works on routers, meaning it can affect all computers connected to that router.

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