Is there a Need to Run Manual
Antivirus Scans
Do you regularly open your Antivirus
Software and run scans? Microsoft Security Essentials and
other antivirus programs believe it is necessary, warning you that your
computer may be at risk if you haven't done it in a while.
In reality, these manual scans are not all
that they seem. You can usually ignore your antivirus and
it will do its work in the background without your help, alerting you only when
it encounters a problem.
Why manual virus scans are
unnecessary
Your antivirus always
runs in the background. It monitors the processes running on your
system, ensuring that no malicious processes are running. Whenever you
download a new file or open a program, your antivirus quickly intervenes,
examines the file, and compares it to viruses before allowing it to
run. If you download a virus, your antivirus will notice it without the
need to scan anything. For example, try downloading the EICAR test
file - your antivirus will spring into action and take care of the
file without the need for manual scans.
This feature is generally known as background
scanning, real-time protection, resident protection, on-demand scanning, or
something like that.
In other words, you don't need to run manual scans
because your antivirus has already checked all files for malware as it
arrives. You are also aware of all the software that is running on your
system. Your antivirus program doesn't need you to click a button; it's
already doing the job.
Anyway, your antivirus probably already runs
its own manual scans. Antiviruses generally run background system scans once a
week without interrupting you.
The Microsoft Security Essentials message is
particularly silly. If MSE really believes that a manual scan is
necessary, MSE has the ability to perform the scan in the background rather
than scaring its users into clicking a button.
When to run manual scans
Manual scans are still useful in some cases,
but you don't need to regularly open your antivirus program and start them:
· When you install an antivirus: When you install an
antivirus for the first time, it will perform a full system scan right
away. This allows antivirus to make sure that your computer is in a clean
state and that there are no viruses lurking in unopened files on your hard
drive. After performing this scan, your antivirus can trust that your
system is safe. However, it will continue to scan files for malware when
you open them.
· Check for inactive malware that was previously lost: Antiviruses use
"definition files", which are updated periodically. These files
basically contain a catalog of identified malware, and your antivirus compares
the programs it runs against the catalog to see if they match. There may
be an inactive virus lurking in an executable file deep within your hard drive
that your antivirus missed during your first manual scan. If a virus definition
has been added for that type, a malware, or antivirus " heuristic have
been improved: it will only detect the inactive virus when you perform a manual
scan. However, the virus will be detected if you try to run the file
containing the virus or during a regularly scheduled full system scan.
· Get a second opinion: You should only have one Antivirus
Software running at a time, as multiple background scanning
antivirus programs can interfere with each other and cause problems on your
computer. If you want to scan your computer with multiple antivirus
programs, you will need to perform a manual scan with the second Antivirus
Software instead of using its background scanning
feature.
Why Background Protection
Is Better Than Manual Scans
Optionally, you can disable background
scanning in some antivirus programs and just run manual scans, but you
shouldn't.
Think of your computer as your home and your
anti-virus background scan protection like a security guard standing at your
front door and searching everyone who tries to enter your home. A manual
scan is the equivalent of a security guard looking for intruders in every inch
of your home.
If you've already checked everyone who enters
your home, you don't need to search every corner of your home for malicious
people. In fact, it is much better to keep an eye on your door because in
order to detect threats before they are allowed in, if you discover someone
lurking in a dark corner of your home or PC, who knows what they have been
doing in the time between when they were allowed in and when did you catch them. Once
the software is running on your computer, it also has the potential to hide
itself and prevent the Antivirus
Software, and even the Windows Task Manager, from seeing that it is
running. The software that does this is generally known as a root kit.
You want to catch the malware before the
virus starts running (and infects) your computer, so stick with
automatic background scanning instead of manual scans. Even if you scan
every program you download manually before running it, you should use
automatic scans for maximum protection against zero-day
attacks. And other security threats.
Some security suites may delete cookies when
you perform a manual scan, referring to them as "threats". This
is a great way for the security suite to pretend that it is doing something
valuable and justify its price. But you don't need a full security
package, anyway, and you can always have your browser automatically
clear cookies if you want to get rid of them.
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