wrecklass
Well-known member
- Jun 8, 2010
- 262
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I know this questions has come up and been answered, probably by those that make antivirus apps... however with the ever changing face of Android and new companies creating new apps all the time, is there a way to know what is the best antivirus app? also, what about having multiple antivirus apps on your phone, kinda like the top two to make sure you are really protected? yeah, I am one of those paranoid people new to android![]()
That's my experience, too.I have been using Android devices since the original Droid 1 in 2009. I have never gotten a single virus, despite ROMing and Sideloading on many different devices. I know dozens of friends and family with Android devices as well (which I am the defacto support for)...none of them has ever had a virus either.
That's what I don't understand about anti-virus programs for Android as well. You have to purposefully bypass security to get a virus, so what's the point in adding security if you're willing to bypass existing security to install apps?All Android devices ship with security on by default. This means nothing can install on your phone that does not come from the official google market. You'd have to deliberately go into Settings and disable this in order to install anything likely to have a virus.
Well, the chances of getting a virus are ridiculously remote, but not zero. There have been viruses on app in the google market before. Even on the Apple App store. It's just so rare that it's unlikely you'll ever encounter them.That's what I don't understand about anti-virus programs for Android as well. You have to purposefully bypass security to get a virus, so what's the point in adding security if you're willing to bypass existing security to install apps?
The thing is that Google already does a scan on all apps. According to that article, less than 0.001% of apps are able to bypass all of Google's defenses. That means that for every million apps in the app store, less than 10 are able to do that. First you'd practically have to specifically search for a malicious app to actually find one. It's not like one of the apps is Instagram or Dolphin. It's something super obscure that no one knows about or it would already be flagged. Besides, that, what could these anti-virus apps do to bring that number down from 10? Do they really have databases of malicious threats that are significantly better than what Google has to where Google wouldn't flag one of the 10 apps, but the anti-virus app would? How are the anti-virus app makers getting the data for what to flag faster than Google?Well, the chances of getting a virus are ridiculously remote, but not zero. There have been viruses on app in the google market before. Even on the Apple App store. It's just so rare that it's unlikely you'll ever encounter them.