NormalUser
15.03.2009, 21:34
A new service from BitDefender called QuickScan
check it here
http://quickscan.bitdefender.com
» What is QuickScan?
BitDefender QuickScan combines intelligent local scanning and in-the-cloud scanning to create an advanced online tool which detects e-threats in memory quickly.
Unlike other online virus scanners, with BitDefender Quickscan there is nothing to install or update. Scanning suspicious items is done remotely, at the push of a button, using the BitDefender Antivirus technologies.
BitDefender Quickscan is currently in Open Beta.
» Why QuickScan?
Detects running malware very fast (usually in less than 30 seconds)
Detects hidden threats (rootkits) and keyloggers
Runs online from any Internet connected PC
Doesn't slow down your PC: most of the operations are performed remotely on the BitDefender servers
Based on award wining BitDefender anti-malware technologies
No need:
to install software
to update virus signature files
to do any configuration tasks
» When to use QuickScan?
Before shopping or banking online
Before logging into any sensitive online account
Before starting to play a game online
When you need to use someone else's computer
Whenever you need to find out quickly if your computer is infected
» Frequently Asked Questions
Q: Quickscan is taking more than 30 seconds! What gives?
A: In a nutshell, Quickscan makes an inventory of the programs that are running, then tells the server what it found.
If the server doesn't recognize a file, it requests the file to be uploaded. Once the server sees a file, it will recognize it by its hash (a sort of digital fingerprint) and never request it again.
Now, the first time you run Quickscan on your system no programs are 'already known' and the server might not know about many of the things Quickscan finds. The best way to make Quickscan quicker is for as many people as possible to run Quickscan as often as possible for a while.
In an ideal scenario, enough people would have already run quickscan to enrich our collection of hashes to the extent that you won't need to upload anything. As this is a BETA, that is probably not the case, yet.
Bottom line: the first time (or first few times) you run it it's normal for the scan to take longer because of hashing and uploading. Once you get a scan to take under 10 seconds, it should stay there unless something big & new pops up.
Q: Will quickscan eat my files, ship all my credit card data to parts unknown or otherwise cause harm?
A: No. Quickscan does not modify or delete any file on your system and only uploads executables for checking. The upside to that is you're safe. The downside is - you guessed it - no virus removal either.
» Known Issues
On systems with UAC (User Access Control) turned on, the ActiveX control won't start. You need to turn UAC off until we find a workaround.
On 64-bit systems the client outputs "Some processes cannot be scanned - insufficient rights" even though the user has admin rights and UAC is turned off.
There might be other 64-bit issues we're not aware of (QuickScan hasn't been compiled for 64-bit architectures yet).
check it here
http://quickscan.bitdefender.com
» What is QuickScan?
BitDefender QuickScan combines intelligent local scanning and in-the-cloud scanning to create an advanced online tool which detects e-threats in memory quickly.
Unlike other online virus scanners, with BitDefender Quickscan there is nothing to install or update. Scanning suspicious items is done remotely, at the push of a button, using the BitDefender Antivirus technologies.
BitDefender Quickscan is currently in Open Beta.
» Why QuickScan?
Detects running malware very fast (usually in less than 30 seconds)
Detects hidden threats (rootkits) and keyloggers
Runs online from any Internet connected PC
Doesn't slow down your PC: most of the operations are performed remotely on the BitDefender servers
Based on award wining BitDefender anti-malware technologies
No need:
to install software
to update virus signature files
to do any configuration tasks
» When to use QuickScan?
Before shopping or banking online
Before logging into any sensitive online account
Before starting to play a game online
When you need to use someone else's computer
Whenever you need to find out quickly if your computer is infected
» Frequently Asked Questions
Q: Quickscan is taking more than 30 seconds! What gives?
A: In a nutshell, Quickscan makes an inventory of the programs that are running, then tells the server what it found.
If the server doesn't recognize a file, it requests the file to be uploaded. Once the server sees a file, it will recognize it by its hash (a sort of digital fingerprint) and never request it again.
Now, the first time you run Quickscan on your system no programs are 'already known' and the server might not know about many of the things Quickscan finds. The best way to make Quickscan quicker is for as many people as possible to run Quickscan as often as possible for a while.
In an ideal scenario, enough people would have already run quickscan to enrich our collection of hashes to the extent that you won't need to upload anything. As this is a BETA, that is probably not the case, yet.
Bottom line: the first time (or first few times) you run it it's normal for the scan to take longer because of hashing and uploading. Once you get a scan to take under 10 seconds, it should stay there unless something big & new pops up.
Q: Will quickscan eat my files, ship all my credit card data to parts unknown or otherwise cause harm?
A: No. Quickscan does not modify or delete any file on your system and only uploads executables for checking. The upside to that is you're safe. The downside is - you guessed it - no virus removal either.
» Known Issues
On systems with UAC (User Access Control) turned on, the ActiveX control won't start. You need to turn UAC off until we find a workaround.
On 64-bit systems the client outputs "Some processes cannot be scanned - insufficient rights" even though the user has admin rights and UAC is turned off.
There might be other 64-bit issues we're not aware of (QuickScan hasn't been compiled for 64-bit architectures yet).