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<blockquote data-quote="mazskolnieces" data-source="post: 926010" data-attributes="member: 88422"><p>That's the whole point of Comodo's virtual container. Comodo only has signatures for old malware (more than a few days old). Everything else not rated as Safe is run inside the virtual container. That is how the product was designed to work.</p><p></p><p>No matter which solution a user chooses, if there is a failure, the user is at-fault - no matter what. Read any AV's or any security product's EULA. The end user is always responsible for an infection or security failure. And no security software publisher will ever offer a zero-infection guarantee. So your best bet, if you are the paranoid type and seriously initiated about your security, is to use default deny, learn what is required, and not rely completely upon software to make decisions for you.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="mazskolnieces, post: 926010, member: 88422"] That's the whole point of Comodo's virtual container. Comodo only has signatures for old malware (more than a few days old). Everything else not rated as Safe is run inside the virtual container. That is how the product was designed to work. No matter which solution a user chooses, if there is a failure, the user is at-fault - no matter what. Read any AV's or any security product's EULA. The end user is always responsible for an infection or security failure. And no security software publisher will ever offer a zero-infection guarantee. So your best bet, if you are the paranoid type and seriously initiated about your security, is to use default deny, learn what is required, and not rely completely upon software to make decisions for you. [/QUOTE]
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