Downloads and Updates. Choose the operating system your product runs on. Release notes. Threat Detection Engine for all platforms. Mac OS X Endpoint Release Notes. For Sophos Central users. Sophos Anti-Virus 9. For Enterprise Console users. Sophos Anti-Virus 9 Recommended.
Thank you, PCNetSpec, My wife and I used unsecured P4 for about a year without anything other than a great experience. In fact, it was P4 that made us both Peppermint Linux OS lovers. I've decided to unsubscribe to Matthew Moore's videos. I beginning to think that video might be one of the first public clues that there is a little business spat going on between Michael Moore and Spatry, and that this business spat is being shown in the guise of sharing useful information. I didn't want you to watch the entire thing, but there were a few digs at Spatry in that video, and I'm quite sure the two were business partners at one time.
I wouldn't be surprised if that project they had going --an alternative to DistroWatch -- might be falling apart at the seems. Hey, who even remembers it? What happened was I received that video last night and I brought it to you this morning precisely because of your integrity and definitely NOT to question it! PCNetSpec, your answer was very informative, and will help keep this thread alive, and certainly will a lot of confused people down the road. I spoke with Mac yesterday about being both dazzled and baffled within the world of Linux. That video was a good example of how one can become baffled with bull____ while not being 100% certain how to relieve the information.
(I didn't realize I'd find such a good example of such bewilderment so quicky to share!) I think I'll be sticking with Spatry on YouTube. Besides, on one of his old Peppermint videos, Spatry ended the video by saying he believed he had found a winner here with Peppermint Linux OS. Borland delphi 6 enterprise edition download. And, of course, Spatry was right about that! Thank you, perknh. OK further info. The 'Imagination' (a lightweight DVD slideshow maker using GTK+2) software is in the default repos.
This is the same software that he's talking about in his video (see the tooltip as he attempts to start the software from his dockbar. So I thought it'd be interesting to test his claim against a copy from a known trusted source. I've downloaded and installed sophos 9.9 I installed imagination Starting Imagination it fires up without issue checking the /var/tmp/imagination directory. Well with imagination runniing /var/tmp is empty full system scan with sophos. Nothing strace also showed no forked child processes. I'd say my suspicions are right, the guy has probably specifically hunted for some infected software from a totally nefarious source to help prove a warped point.
And I don't for one minute think he got the source code to 'rebuild it' from the actual authors. If I were the authors of imagination I'd be seriously pi**esd off at this and someone should point it out to them and allow them to respond. I think this closes the matter? Installing imagination from a known and trusted source was 100% safe (even according to sophos)::0 It would not be in the repos if it were known to contain malware. It would be spotted REALLY quickly, and if it were added by the authors the package would likely never make it in again.
Remember, ALL the packages in the default repositories were when they were submitted and are still open to code review and have a lot of eyes on them. Full system scan results from sophos 9.9 whilst imagination was running. Mark@AA1-Blue /opt/sophos-av/bin $ sudo savscan / SAVScan virus detection utility Version 5.12.0 [Linux/Intel] Virus data version 5.13, March 2015 Includes detection for 8899461 viruses, Trojans and worms Copyright (c) 1989-2015 Sophos Limited. All rights reserved. System time 18:30:31, System date 23 April 2015 Quick Scanning Could not open /home/mark/.config/pulse/96bb382fb2353661ffc6b3-runtime Could not open /var/run/user/1000/gvfs Could not open /usr/lib/firefox/hyphenation Could not open /usr/share/doc/python-jinja2/html 23878 files scanned in 14 minutes and 6 seconds.