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Zero Trust (Solution Vote)
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<blockquote data-quote="SpiderWeb" data-source="post: 1016348" data-attributes="member: 88686"><p>Casting my vote for other:</p><p></p><p>Two years ago I made a decision that I will never have the ideal default-deny solution for Windows. The entire OS was swiss cheese. So I switched to ChromeOS at first and now I'm using macOS. Apple solved this issue with Monterey making the entire system default-deny... by default. Exploits like those on Windows are rarely possible and if found get fixed immediately. All system libraries are signed and check-sumed every time they run to be fully tamper-resistant.</p><p></p><p>If you have to stick to Windows, I would say get Kaspersky and configure their default-deny. It is by far the easiest to understand and configure. That way you know your system files and apps are not being tampered with and Kaspersky is sophisticated enough to recognize new attacks based on context.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="SpiderWeb, post: 1016348, member: 88686"] Casting my vote for other: Two years ago I made a decision that I will never have the ideal default-deny solution for Windows. The entire OS was swiss cheese. So I switched to ChromeOS at first and now I'm using macOS. Apple solved this issue with Monterey making the entire system default-deny... by default. Exploits like those on Windows are rarely possible and if found get fixed immediately. All system libraries are signed and check-sumed every time they run to be fully tamper-resistant. If you have to stick to Windows, I would say get Kaspersky and configure their default-deny. It is by far the easiest to understand and configure. That way you know your system files and apps are not being tampered with and Kaspersky is sophisticated enough to recognize new attacks based on context. [/QUOTE]
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