HMPA does a lot of tricks but it is not a replacement for HIPS/BB.In that case, HMP.A would be a very good addition to an Antivirus that doesn't have a behavior module.
don't waste your money on Malwarebytes Anti malware. You can get better anti-malware protection for your money. Zemana, for instance.I have a free full version key from ZEMANA (promotion) but it expires in few days. At this time i'm using only the free version of "Malwarebytes Anti malware": the real time protection is not available in this version. But i wanted to buy both full version keys soon. The reason for my question is: i'm not an expert but maybe it is better to have/use the real time protection to increase the security of my systems. Real time scanner are removing/detecting malware immediately. If you are using only an on demand scanner ( one or two times a week) then maybe it's too late in some cases (and malware can spread.....). This "delay" makes me a little bit "nervous"....![]()
I often read recommendations that dissuade people from using an AV together with a companion AV (commonly mislabeled Anti-Malware by the manufacturers themselves), whereas nobody has a problem with combining an AV with something more aggressive and invasive, like HMP.Alert, Sandboxie, MBAE and the likes. In my opinion the latter combination has much more conflict potential.
Sandboxie is the mother of incompatibility (not meant as an insult) with other products, aside from Windows Defender. HMP.Alert has behavioral and exploit protection, which most AVs have today. Ever wondered what happens when EAM's behavior blocker and Alert's behavioral dectections (cryptoguard, process protection) might be triggered at the same time? Ever wondered what happens in case of an exploit, when both your AV and your companion anti-exploit software proactively watch for exploits?
I don't think that combining MBAM Premium with EAM, for example, is such a conflict prone combination.
interesting. so more is less.Ever wondered what happens when EAM's behavior blocker and Alert's behavioral dectections (cryptoguard, process protection) might be triggered at the same time? Ever wondered what happens in case of an exploit, when both your AV and your companion anti-exploit software proactively watch for exploits?