The board is labeled "Rants and Randomness," so here's a rant for you.
I purchased Norton SystemWorks 2004 back in August of 2004, within a week of purchasing the machine that I still use to this day. This was actually on Phoenix's recommendation at the time, and I was happy with it. The suite did some things that I was thrilled about, such as removing unnecessary registry entries and shortcuts, on top of what seemed like top-notch virus protection. I've been unable to afford an upgrade to a newer version of the program, but I've kept it as up-to-date as possible. My only gripe with it is that it would take quite a while to do a full system scan, though it did like to rifle through compressed/ZIP'd folders during that process, so that wasn't really an issue.
But, as Phoenix has noted before, virus definitions are only part of the battle. Having the program itself as current as possible is also necessary, as some of these things like to find ways around detection with older software. Other programs exist that serve the same registry/shortcut cleanup functions as SystemWorks, and I've had some good experiences with a free antivirus program (AVG) on other machines in the last year, so earlier this morning, I uninstalled SystemWorks and replaced it with a combination of
AVG Antivirus and
CCleaner. I've not yet run CCleaner, but AVG has been allowed to do a full scan.
It found a trojan. That was planted
three years ago. About a month after I'd installed SystemWorks. For the claims Symantec makes about its virus protection, even if the trojan didn't seem to be doing anything, that is inexcusable.
So thank you, Symantec, for creating a program,
that I paid good money for, that allows malicious files to slip by initial detection and then exist on a system for three years, even with numerous updates to said program. Perhaps I should have learned my lesson when a version of Norton Antivirus produced in 1997 completely destroyed the only stable installation of Windows 95 I've ever personally had experience with.
I will not be using Symantec software again.