Saturday 5 October 2013

Kaspersky Antivirus 2013 {WITH LICENSE}

                                                               Kaspersky Antivirus 2013
Kaspersky Antivirus 2013 90 Days Trial Download Download Kaspersky Antivirus 2013 with 3 month License



Kaspersky Anti-Virus 2013 is a powerful antivirus tool which provides many ways to detect, block and remove malware.
The program allows you to scan individual files or folders from the Explorer right-click menu, for instance. The Critical Areas Scan checks just the most likely infection points in a few seconds, while the Full Scan checks everything. And scans can be run manually, on a schedule, or you can have the program check your system automatically whenever it's idle.
While Kaspersky Anti-Virus 2013 looks and feels very like the previous edition, there are changes below the surface. The main addition, Kaspersky's new Automatic Exploit Prevention, aims to prevent malware from taking advantage of software vulnerabilities to infect your PC. And other tweaks include a simplified installation process, more accurate detection of phishing sites, and an easier-to-use virtual keyboard, which helps you enter passwords, account numbers and other details without their being intercepted by key loggers.
And a selection of interesting bonus tools will check Windows and Internet Explorer for poorly configured settings, as well as helping you maintain privacy by deleting various Windows and application histories.
None of this power gets in your way, though, and Kaspersky Anti-Virus 2013 is for the most part very easy to use, making the program a very good choice for novices and PC experts alike.
New Capabilities:
  • On-the-fly scanning of emails & Internet traffic
  • Proactive defense against new malicious programs
  • Optimized antivirus scanning
  • Protection from rootkits
  • Instant database updates
  • Simplicity and ease of use

Features and support

Kaspersky 2013's newest and best features come in the form of some very forward-thinking security improvements.

The most important of them is the exploit blocking engine called Automatic Exploit Prevention. It's a response to the increase in the number of phishing attacks and includes an antiphishing engine -- similar to the antivirus and anti-malware engines -- that updates daily.

It's hard to overstate how critical stopping exploits can be to stopping large-quantity cash thefts from online banks. Experts have estimated recent successful banking breaches at scoring from $3 million to more than $220 million, and Kaspersky says that the exploit prevention engine stops the vast majority of exploit kits.

A major component of the exploit prevention engine is Address Space Layout Randomization, or ASLR. It's a proven security technology, used in Apple OS X and iOS, in Google's Android, and by Microsoft in Windows 8. It's not foolproof, but it is one of the more effective security technologies currently available. The inclusion of ASLR in Kaspersky means that the technology will be available to Windows 7 and earlier versions, making Kaspersky unique in the security realm for that reason.

The suite now blocks Duqu and other malware specifically designed to surreptitiously install on your computer before the antivirus program loads during boot.

Safe Money revamps the Safe Run feature from previous years and is only in Kaspersky Internet Security 2013, not Kaspersky Anti-Virus. It basically streamlines the process of accessing banking sites securely. Simply go to your banking site, and as long as you have Kaspersky's browser add-ons installed, it will ask you if you want to open the site in a sandboxed mode, isolated from other browser and PC processes. You can also manually add other sites to Safe Money in Kaspersky's interface, but it's no longer a requirement because of Safe Money's new auto-detection. You can tell it's running because of a thin green line around your browser window.

There are older features worth calling out, too. One is the File Advisor, which is a Windows Explorer context menu option for checking out a file's reputation without having to go through the main Kaspersky program itself. It creates a pipeline from the Kaspersky Security Network, the Kaspersky cloud protection, to the files on your desktop. We found it to pull down reputation data quickly, although its speed also depends on your Internet connection.

The Roll Back feature can easily undo damage caused by any malware that does slip through, and the Network Monitor feature shows you real-time traffic to and from your computer. Among the better ancillary tools are an Internet Explorer security analyzer, which is a good idea if you're stuck on Windows XP with IE8 or earlier -- but it's weird that it doesn't support any other browsers.

The virtual keyboard, different from the physical keyboard protection, has been improved so that it's more responsive than previously. It's mostly an older feature to use if you're worried about keyloggers that Kaspersky keeps around for bragging rights. It's highly unlikely that you'd have Kaspersky running and be infected by a keylogger.

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