Thanks
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Browse All TopicsWhen excluding folders or drives from an anti-virus scan, it means the folder or the drive is at risk. Correct?
we have computers that run processes(apps) all the time and the anti-virus scan if applied will slow the process(apps) to death. So in one side we decided to exclude the folders/drives from being scanned in other side there is fear of getting the folders/drives infected.
Do you know of any procedure that can be a remedy to this issue?
thanks
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by: r-kPosted on 2009-08-18 at 08:51:14ID: 25124507
To answer your first question, yes, there is always some risk when you don't scan a folder or drive. Of course, there is always some risk even if you do scan that folder or drive, because no AV program is perfect. It is matter of degree, and balancing risk vs other priorities.
There are two ways you can scan a folder, in real time, or on a scheduled basis. Perhaps this could be useful here, i.e. you could schedule a scan of those folders once a day (around midnight) and disable real-time scanning. This should minimize impact on performance while still giving you some protection.
A lot depends on what is in those folders. For example, if the folders in question contain data files, or a database, there is less risk of infection compared to a folder used for web browsing or email.
You also have to evaluate how secure your computer needs to be. If this is mission critical data (e.g. a disaster if any infection) then you need one solution. If it will be more an inconvenience then you can be more lax.