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And this is just this year,now you would think a company of this ilk (you all know what a ilk is) would get it right by now,but they keep making the same mistakes and they have had security flaws from day one,at the end of the day it's your machine which could be hit due to the holes in I.E. and the nasties that it will allow to get to your machine and bypass your virus checker will be almost impossible to remove,in fact a lot of the time you won't even know it's there working away in the background,to start with your machine will be running slow,then your friends say they have had some very odd mail from you,your internet gets blocked as your machine has been acting as a mail server sending millions of spam mails everyday,or even worse your bank account is empty

Well, have been looking at this seriously (and have heard it all before). Have spent a fair amount of time in the last couple of days working with Google Chrome. Not over impressed. First had to rid it of some search system called trovigo (or something like) and in another place it was using Yahoo. I would have thought that inherently the search system that was there when you fire up would be Google. Of course, it turned out that it had a couple of bugs in it - Chrome and not Internet Explorer.

Also tried Firefox for a brief time. Quickly found that I had to load a security update so that had obviously had holes in it.

Back to Chrome - I suppose I might get used to it but there are a few features I do not like. Seems to struggle to layout some websites on the screen. Would prefer to have an edit bar and in general one has to ferret around to get toolbars in place. What is really bad is that with some operations it is incredibly difficult to find out how to undo the operation.

Some of the points made in the quote - and here I am not arguing, merely observing:

If nasties get by your virus checker/firewall surely there is a problem with that application.

Machine running slow can be due to several other causes.

Odd emails - according to my expert major problem here is/was problem with Btinternet when they tied up with Yahoo making email accounts easy to hack. Nothing to do with IE.

Bank account empty - since banks take the hit for internet fraud (well mine does) I find it hard to believe they would accept online customers using IE.

One of the major bugs this year has been the Heartbleed Bug and I do not think that was IE unique.

I do feel that with the majority of users using IE and particularly those who do not bother with a virus checker/firewall that is where the criminal will concentrate its activities which, I will accept might be a good reason for steering away from IE, but I cannot accept that other browsers are faultless.
 
Well, have been looking at this seriously (and have heard it all before). Have spent a fair amount of time in the last couple of days working with Google Chrome. Not over impressed. First had to rid it of some search system called trovigo (or something like) and in another place it was using Yahoo. I would have thought that inherently the search system that was there when you fire up would be Google. Of course, it turned out that it had a couple of bugs in it - Chrome and not Internet Explorer.

Also tried Firefox for a brief time. Quickly found that I had to load a security update so that had obviously had holes in it.

Back to Chrome - I suppose I might get used to it but there are a few features I do not like. Seems to struggle to layout some websites on the screen. Would prefer to have an edit bar and in general one has to ferret around to get toolbars in place. What is really bad is that with some operations it is incredibly difficult to find out how to undo the operation.

Some of the points made in the quote - and here I am not arguing, merely observing:

If nasties get by your virus checker/firewall surely there is a problem with that application.

Machine running slow can be due to several other causes.

Odd emails - according to my expert major problem here is/was problem with Btinternet when they tied up with Yahoo making email accounts easy to hack. Nothing to do with IE.

Bank account empty - since banks take the hit for internet fraud (well mine does) I find it hard to believe they would accept online customers using IE.

One of the major bugs this year has been the Heartbleed Bug and I do not think that was IE unique.

I do feel that with the majority of users using IE and particularly those who do not bother with a virus checker/firewall that is where the criminal will concentrate its activities which, I will accept might be a good reason for steering away from IE, but I cannot accept that other browsers are faultless.

I agree Unc all browsers seem to have their glitches and no matter what browser you use you have to be so careful with updates from the likes of Adobe,Java to name but a few because if you overlook the tick boxes they will change your search options,some of the search options that can be overlooked are as bad as a virus,you can spend a lot of time getting rid of them,a simple removing them from the system will not work as soon as you reboot they are back,so it is a case of ridding them from the registry file.

As far as anti virus software goes the main retailers and even laptop manufacturers will push who ever offers them the largest kickback,sadly this is either Norton or Mcafee,there are many others out there often cheaper that not only do just a good or better job they are less resources hungry,some are very proactive and as soon as a new problem is discover they will update the virus data file on your machine,if it on at the time,if not it will add it the next time it is started, the experts claim either a new virus or strain will develop every couple of hours and will circulate the world within 6 hours passed on by junk emails or dodgy web sites.Earlier this year I went to the BBC news website,only to be halted by my antivirus software,which informed me the site had a virus,hard to believe,but I took notice of the warning, later that day information was released that hackers had taken the logo image and injected a virus into the image and then replaced the logo on the site,so how many folk thought this must be a mistake and entered the site ?

As I have a lot of folk who live nearby who often fall foul of nasties I use several tools to rid their machines of these nasties,a couple that appear to work well for basic malware and system cleanup are Malwarebytes (The free version) and CCleaner for which there is a free version,very good for cleaning junk,registry,unwanted programs plus programs you don't want to start at boot
 
As I have a lot of folk who live nearby who often fall foul of nasties I use several tools to rid their machines of these nasties,a couple that appear to work well for basic malware and system cleanup are Malwarebytes (The free version) and CCleaner for which there is a free version,very good for cleaning junk,registry,unwanted programs plus programs you don't want to start at boot

For a thorough clean-up, but not getting rid of horrible nasties, I use Revo Uninstaller. The only time I've needed to resort to Malwarebytes was after having accessed Pirate Bay in search of Summer Wine episodes. I never got past the point of retrieving the list of available episodes but even so, my PC was infected with an extremely persistent supplier of pornography that I had to assassinate with Malwarebytes.

Marianna
 
My son uses Firefox and/or Chrome but he swears by C Cleaner and Malwarebytes and declares that I should have them permanently installed. :)
 
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