ESET NOD32 Antivirus Review: Lab-Certified Protection With High-Tech Extras
ESET NOD32 Antivirus is certified by four independent labs and comes with uncommon, useful security bonuses that will delight tech-savvy users.
ESET NOD32 Antivirus Review: Lab-Certified Protection With High-Tech Extras
ESET NOD32 Antivirus is certified by four independent labs and comes with uncommon, useful security bonuses that will delight tech-savvy users.
The vulnerability arose from the “incorrect validation of the server certificate chain,” according to ESET. Essentially, an intermediate certificate signed using the MD5 or SHA1 algorithm was mistakenly considered trusted.
#Cybersecurity #ESET #Linux #Windows #NOD32 #Vulnerability
https://cybersec84.wordpress.com/2023/12/26/eset-patches-critical-secure-traffic-scanning-bug/
@[email protected] our household currently still runs on #ESET's #NOD32: https://mastodon.social/@FiXato/103583175330838989
(Though we could probably also just suffice with #WindowsDefender.)
@greyor not FOSS, and not even gratis, but I've been a satisfied customer of #ESET's #NOD32 for close to (or maybe even over) a decade now.
At the time I started using it, it consistently ranked at the top, though based on #PCMag's #2019 review (https://uk.pcmag.com/antivirus/36405/eset-nod32-antivirus) it might be lagging behind on the competition.
It's affordable though, and hasn't been getting in my way like other #antiVirus scanners I've used previously.
@[email protected] I've been a satisfied user of #Eset's #NOD32 Anti-Virus for probably over a decade now.
It doesn't get in my way, like many of the free scanners such as AVG and Avira did (do?), or brings my PC to a crawl (like Norton started doing back when I still used it around 2004(?)).
I've considered #Microsoft's #WindowsDefender, as it's an often praised free solution, but #EAV's been doing a fine job, and I hate change, so I haven't tried switching yet.
Renewed my #ESET #NOD32 license.
Website: you'll receive your new license details within *10 minutes* via e-mail
E-mail (in spam): your license details have automatically been updated: you don't need to do anything; the expiration dates on your machines will update in *24 hours*
Also e-mail, but in inbox: your purchase was successful: you'll receive your license details within *30 minutes* via e-mail.
Have they been affected by Windows' time estimates? ;)