Some time ago the term "spyware" was invented, and promptly "anti-spyware" products appeared. Their "myth" still persists, many people (who should know better!) recommending that you have an "anti-virus and a anti-spyware product" (I've even seen "anti-malware" added to this list which is an even bigger nonsense, since the term malware includes both viruses and spyware!)
There might have been some shortcoming in anti-malware products years ago which allowed these products to appear, however these days there isn't really a difference. Still, we are left with the archaic idea that we must pay ~30 USD a year for such a product in addition to the anti-malware suite.
A quick quiz: what does spyware do?
- It writes files to the disk - just like any downloader / dropper - AV products can certainly handle that.
- It writes to the registry (to make itself start automatically for example) - just like a wast majority of malware - AV products can handle that (probably this was the one weak point of anti-malware solutions which allowed these products to appear).
- It injects DLLs into other processes (for example by registering a BHO) - just like any good password stealer - AV products can certainly handle that.
Both solutions have the same technological underpinnings (blacklisting of files / registry keys), with the anti-malware solutions having a bigger "list". So as much as I disagree with the idea of blacklisting, I would hands down choose the bigger list, especially if it includes the smaller one.
So people, please do your users a favor: stop recommending separate "anti-spyware" solutions.
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