Skip to content
View in the app

A better way to browse. Learn more.

The AVSIM Community

A full-screen app on your home screen with push notifications, badges and more.

To install this app on iOS and iPadOS
  1. Tap the Share icon in Safari
  2. Scroll the menu and tap Add to Home Screen.
  3. Tap Add in the top-right corner.
To install this app on Android
  1. Tap the 3-dot menu (⋮) in the top-right corner of the browser.
  2. Tap Add to Home screen or Install app.
  3. Confirm by tapping Install.

How to deal with virus risk of weather software

Featured Replies

The clear advice from PMDG is to switch off real-time scanning when flying the NGX.

 

Am using McAfee, which I don't think lets you isolate FSX and keep real-time scanning while the weather programs are active.

 

My questions:

 

Is there a real risk of virus infection while using (say) REX online? If so, how can one deal with this? With McAfee? Is there an alternative security application, which permits isolation of individual programs? What are other people doing this?

 

Thanks for any advice!

 

Best wishes,

 

David

David Abrahams

 

800driver.jpg

  • Commercial Member

A computer "virus" doesn't work like that. You have nothing to worry about from your weather software, or FSX or just about anything else like that.

Noah Bryant
 

  • Commercial Member

Yeah, a virus isn't going to come through your REX or AS weather feeds - viruses aren't just wild code that comes from anywhere like that. You usually have to run some bogus exe file that gets emailed to you or visit a website that exploits a security hole in the browser or a utility like Adobe Flash or Reader etc.

 

As long as your keep your software (especially Windows itself) up to date and use common sense with what websites you're visiting and not opening email attachments that don't look right, you're not going to get a virus. Those are really the two biggest things, running an antivirus program is just extra protection - the real protection comes from the user.

 

Also, when we say real time scanning, we mean the scanning of file access activity for FSX when it's already present on your hard drive - when FSX is running its constantly accessing scenery files and stuff - you don't want those being run through a virus scanner every time they're read, it can cause stutters and other problems. This isn't the same thing as completely disabling the AV program - most AV programs have an option for excluding folders - that's what I use, I don't shut it down when I run FSX. This will still scan everything that comes in from the Internet etc.

Ryan Maziarz
devteam.jpg

For fastest support, please submit a ticket at http://support.precisionmanuals.com

  • Author

Thanks, Ryan. Are you able to say which AV suite you are using? I checked again and McAfee Total Protection only gives the option between real-time scanning ALL FILES or just ALL PROGRAMS AND DOCUMENTS. In other words, you can't isolate FSX as a program or folder whilst keeping other Internet scanning on ...

 

Best wishes,

 

David

 

Oh - and thanks to everyone for your other reassurances. I'm just really risk- averse on this, because my work stuff is on the same PC!

 

Best wishes,

 

David

David Abrahams

 

800driver.jpg

Thanks, Ryan. Are you able to say which AV suite you are using? I checked again and McAfee Total Protection only gives the option between real-time scanning ALL FILES or just ALL PROGRAMS AND DOCUMENTS. In other words, you can't isolate FSX as a program or folder whilst keeping other Internet scanning on ...

 

Best wishes,

 

David

 

Oh - and thanks to everyone for your other reassurances. I'm just really risk- averse on this, because my work stuff is on the same PC!

 

Best wishes,

 

David

best best is to have your work stuff on a seperate pc if depending of course if you can afford it :0

I7-8700k,Corsair h1101 cooler ,Asus Strix Gaming Intel Z370 S11 motherboard, Corsair 32gb ramDD4,, gtx 1080ti Card,  RM850 power supply

 

Peter kelberg

Try mse. It's free, gets steady updates from Microsoft & has a very low footprint compared to resource hogs like mcafee & norton.

 

It's just like Ryan said, stay off the shady sites & don't open unknown email attachments. I've asked people who "sent" attachments of it really came from them & you'd be surprised how often the answer is "No, I haven't emailed you in weeks."

 

Edit: But there again I have all the filtering disabled on my mail server so I don't have to worry about important stuff being inadvertently blocked.

Kenneth Weir

My Saitek yoke mod

 

i7 2600k @ 4.7

8GB Gskill CAS7

2x GTX580 SLI Surround + GT520 Accessory

Win7x64

  • Commercial Member

I use Microsoft Security Essentials - http://www.microsoft.com/en-us/download/details.aspx?id=5201

 

Free, very good and very lightweight on system resources. We all use it at PMDG. It has the exclusions feature I was talking about.

 

I personally think McAfee, Norton, any of the "big name" AV programs are super bloated and often do more harm than good in how much of your system resources they take up.

Ryan Maziarz
devteam.jpg

For fastest support, please submit a ticket at http://support.precisionmanuals.com

I dumped mcafee and norton a long time ago. they are not worth the aggravation they cause with a lot of programs, not just FSX. get MSE or/and malwarebytes.They let you isolate the programs like Ryan has suggested. I use them both and never had a problem with them,FSX, or PMDG

Boeing777_Banner_Pilot.jpg

Norton isnt really a resource hog any longer, I believe its one of the lightest programs these days

Johan Pettersen

I use Microsoft Security Essentials - http://www.microsoft...ls.aspx?id=5201

 

Free, very good and very lightweight on system resources. We all use it at PMDG. It has the exclusions feature I was talking about.

 

I personally think McAfee, Norton, any of the "big name" AV programs are super bloated and often do more harm than good in how much of your system resources they take up.

 

 

I use this is as well for all of the reasons outlined by Ryan. As far as REX goes it downloads the weather info directly from NOAA so you really have a better chance of getting hit by a meteor than getting a virus.

Dan Schultz

rexe_beta.png

 

REX Latitude BETA Team Member  https://rexlatitude.com

I use Microsoft Security Essentials - http://www.microsoft...ls.aspx?id=5201

 

Free, very good and very lightweight on system resources. We all use it at PMDG. It has the exclusions feature I was talking about.

 

I personally think McAfee, Norton, any of the "big name" AV programs are super bloated and often do more harm than good in how much of your system resources they take up.

 

Exactly! I've had viruses living happy with McAfee installed and removed them with the free version of Malwarebytes AntiMalware. This is the only thing I use, the paid version for protection. The free version removes the viruses but doesn't provide the live protection and also updates almost everyday.

 

CheManuel

Banner_MJC5_zps205e3e5b.png

Banner_MJC11_zps184453a0.png

 

I used to use MSE like Ryan, but I now use Avast. It's wayyy more complex and better. It is lighter than MSE! I'm looking at task manager right now and it's around 3 megabytes. Not bad!

 

I use the exclusions thing a lot... I have my Microsoft Games folder in there, and my FSX's Appdata folder in there as well. I have no issues with anything.

i7-6700K @ 4.5 GHz, 16 GB DDR4-2400 MHz, GTX 1070 8GB

  • Commercial Member
Is there a real risk of virus infection while using (say) REX online?

A real risk - no.

 

If so, how can one deal with this? With McAfee? Is there an alternative security application, which permits isolation of individual programs? What are other people doing this?

I don't run anti-anything. Nothing. Nada.

 

Keep off the warez sites and you'll be alright.

 

Best regards,

Robin.

Since virii are propagated via email, drive by website, memory stick etc, even if you are careful, by not having antivirus software you run a real risk of getting infected - and then being completely unaware for an extended period of time.

EHMM2-sigbar.png

PC: Core i7 920 [email protected], 6GB Ram, SSD, Nvidia GTX 570

Mac: 27" iMac i5, 4GB Ram, ATI HD 5750

HW: Track IR, CH + Saitek Controls, VRInsight MCP

Create an account or sign in to comment

Account

Navigation

Search

Search

Configure browser push notifications

Chrome (Android)
  1. Tap the lock icon next to the address bar.
  2. Tap Permissions → Notifications.
  3. Adjust your preference.
Chrome (Desktop)
  1. Click the padlock icon in the address bar.
  2. Select Site settings.
  3. Find Notifications and adjust your preference.