Yahoo Answers is shutting down on May 4th, 2021 (Eastern Time) and beginning April 20th, 2021 (Eastern Time) the Yahoo Answers website will be in read-only mode. There will be no changes to other Yahoo properties or services, or your Yahoo account. You can find more information about the Yahoo Answers shutdown and how to download your data on this help page.
Trending News
is norton a good product?
on a rating of the top five where would you rate it.
thank you :-)
13 Answers
- 1 decade agoFavorite Answer
I'd rate it 3.5 / 5 since Norton is kinda slow on start up and not worth the price you pay for it. But on the upside the scan is very good because it's not as slow as Mcafee and detects most spyware and viruses. The interface is also a plus, one of the best in my opinion.
- L SLv 71 decade ago
I don't know where I would rate it but it's not as good as it used to be and hogs too much of the resources. I used to use it and friends have one of the latest suites but I maintain friends' computer and they've had more trouble than us with viruses and we use other products for security. That said, I like how easy it is to disable Norton 360 temporarily and that when time's up, it switches back on if you forgot to do it. I think Norton 360 might be a swing back to a better product but I'm still waiting to hear more experiences from people. I use free of everything so I'm only interested from an "academic" point of view.
- MINDDOCTORLv 71 decade ago
I would rate Nortons a zero. Will eat up all of your resources, fails to find viruses. If one is found usually is unable to remove. If removed will always leave fragments of the virus behind. And if you ever want to remove from your system, not even their removal tool will do the job. You are left with over 375 fragments of Nortons and the parent company glued to all of your files, folders, sub folders and registry. You have a total nightmare getting the fragments of Nortons out of your system.
You can use Avira from Germany free version has a detection rating higher then Kaspersky Russia of about 97.6%. http://www.free-av.com/
Or you can download the free version of Avast. http://www.avast.com/ They will ask you for your email address so they can send you a key that is good for one year. After one year just request a new key.
Mind Doctor, France
- CupcakeLv 71 decade ago
I rate having Norton worst than having a virus. Its IS one of the most awful product known to mankind. its no fairy story, I have seen so many with Norton where the computer slow to a crawl yet allows so many virus in.
Try Kaspersky or Panda
- How do you think about the answers? You can sign in to vote the answer.
- 1 decade ago
Norton sucks. You can get a good free antivirus here
http://www.free-av.com/en/download/1/download_avir...
First, download the free avira and then uninstall Norton through Add/Remove in your Control Panel, then install Avira. Never have two anti-virus softwares running on your computer.
- Anonymous1 decade ago
I have had both Norton and Mcafee and I have Norton now. I like Norton better. A computer person told me once that virus definitions are quicker with Norton.
- Anonymous1 decade ago
-2 norton is a worthless piece of software seriously I used it for years until my computer was crashing and I tried every thing a friend of mine told me to try another security program I did and there was a virus within norton a trojan to be exact i dunno there are a lot of good ones out there but the one that I use now is called trend micro works great for me but stay away from norton
- doc_up72Lv 51 decade ago
Norton amazes me by the simple fact that it's become popular at all. Probably by attaching itself to Microsoft or some other company. It sucks.
I tested it against the free version of avast and avast won on the same computer and OS hands down.
- 1 decade ago
It depends what you want it for and if youre willing to pay subscription fees. I get by with AdAware. Id give nortons a 4 for customer support and functionality. but really, any with up-to-date definitions will work just fine. :) hope i helped.
Source(s): Personal Experience