One time I accidentally downloaded the McAfee scan. Avast Home found it in startup and removed it for me. McAfee Scan tends to conflict with other antivirus products.
They do have an updater but it's slow to pick up changes and still requires user intervention.
I haven't had Flash installed for a couple years and rarely miss it – if you use click-to-play many sites favor Flash but will use HTML5 video if the plugin isn't available, so you actually get a better experience with it entirely gone rather than just disabled by default.
and if you must have flash, run it in chrome -- they have sandboxing (though one of the recent exploits got around that), but they also have auto-update that works. Oh, and they fix fucking 0-days faster than Adobe :rolleyes:
I sometimes use Chrome, just for the few times I want Flash.
I've created a separate Standard user for this on my Mac. I don't really care if a Flash exploit takes over this user. The exploit would then have to work a little bit harder to get its tentacles into the rest of OS X (although I'd bet there were OS X zero-day exploits in that Hacking Team dump).
I suppose it's time to add a VM to the recipe. Then my protections would be:
1st Flash itself
2nd Chrome sandbox
3rd VMware
4th OS X Standard User
What are the odds of any exploit being able to circumvent all of that? Probably high if I'm a strategic target, probably very low if I'm Joe Random User.
Anything else I could do to protect myself, other than eschewing Flash altogether?
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[ 48.0 ms ] story [ 241 ms ] threadBut no, every time, we have to goto their download page, uncheck Mcaffee bundleware and run through the installation wizard every time.
I think it's time to completely disable the plugin..
I haven't had Flash installed for a couple years and rarely miss it – if you use click-to-play many sites favor Flash but will use HTML5 video if the plugin isn't available, so you actually get a better experience with it entirely gone rather than just disabled by default.
I've created a separate Standard user for this on my Mac. I don't really care if a Flash exploit takes over this user. The exploit would then have to work a little bit harder to get its tentacles into the rest of OS X (although I'd bet there were OS X zero-day exploits in that Hacking Team dump).
I suppose it's time to add a VM to the recipe. Then my protections would be:
What are the odds of any exploit being able to circumvent all of that? Probably high if I'm a strategic target, probably very low if I'm Joe Random User.Anything else I could do to protect myself, other than eschewing Flash altogether?