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번역 관련 문제 보고
Heh, I didn't want to be the one to say this ;-)
https://answers.yahoo.com/question/index?qid=20090206180216AAq20wO
in my experience, norton is a right pain to navigate, exacerbated by the fact that it takes ages to do anything.
whether the latest version is any good i can't say but i've seen a lot of malware missed by norton and mcaffee in the past.
when you say 'i may have a couple of viruses' and 'norton takes care of them', what exactly do you mean? do you mean that norton keeps detecting the same ones? if so, it's not taking care of them at all.
download a trial of either kaspersky's or eset's antivirus/security software and run scans with those.
then change norton's settings to NOT automatically deal with suspected viruses, so it gives you a choice what to do with it - one of which should be to add it to an exclusion list.
Michael York
Norton Authorized Support Team
Symantec Corporation
now everything he needs to know "the idea" of adding and exception/exclusion is presented there.
sidenote: telling someone to uninstall their AV because that is the only solution u can come up with doesnt make it the right one.
that is like telling him to not use an AV and that would solve his issue, his issue is with norton so help him fix the norton issue where he doesnt have to find a new antivirus because he didnt ask for a new antivirus :)
to help u more with your issue.
http://community.norton.com/t5/Norton-360/How-to-get-Norton-360-to-stop-deleting-a-program-exe-file-that/td-p/644621
here are the steps for you:
1. Open your Norton product
2. On the main window click Tasks and there on the Security History option
3. On the opened window click on the drop down menu and select Quarantine
4. On the list find the file you want to restore
5. Click on More Details (bottom, right side)
6. On the new window click on Options (bottom)
7. Click on Restore file
8. Check the "do not detect it any more option" during the restore
9. Close windows
NOTE: if u want more specific help for your version of norton u should probably tell us which version of norton you use.
the idea is pretty much the same or it should be for every version u just gotta find the menues :)
I DID THIS YESDERDAY
I run an antivirus.
I may have couple of viruses.
Antivirus takes care of them.
I wasn't having a dig at you, but at the fact that Yahoo answers is better place for information over Norton/Symantec's own Support - says a lot, whether it's posted by a Norton employee or not. I didn't read the linked page.
I didn't suggest uninstalling their AV, I told them to turn it off, which is exactly the right thing to do when you're running a second/third opinion scan.
I will grant that I neglected to advise them to turn it on. Not turning it back on again would mean it wouldn't bring up a requester for the OP to add it to Norton's exclusions.
Of course, it's not beyond possibility that the guy has an infection that has infected the steam.exe in his install package though Norton should detect it unless it is not configured to scan within installation archives. Running a scan with another AV is essential in detecting newer threats that any security software, however effective, might miss. Just adding an executable to an exclusion can be disastrous, in the same way that telling people to only open emails from people they know can, and does, result in infections.
All that said, the input of everyone in this thread (with the exception of TrithRR's) appears to be helpful, which is exactly the point of the community. :)