I promptly turned off Lookout when I got my Note and do not use any antivirus on my phone.
Any reason you shut it off? Bad app? Or just against them in general?
I'm in Australia with telstra and it is a "telstra recommended app" in the play store. Deciding whether to bother or not.
Sent from my SM-N9005 using AC Forums mobile app
Probably do nothing but hey they are free and stop me from installing pest apps, like those that put adds on the menu bar of those apps that send you unwanted text messages that you pay for.
Thanks for the reply. Just came across from iPhone 3 weeks ago buying a note 3. So still learning and it appears that antivirus is one of the great android debates haha.
Sent from my SM-N9005 using AC Forums mobile app
Because a little bit of common sense is all you need to avoid needing one and I do not want it running in the background using device resources and battery. Due to the way mobile OSs sandbox apps, a true virus is more or less impossible on mobile. So that means these "antivirus" software are actually anti-malware software. There are a few easy steps to avoid downloading malware on your device. First and foremost, make sure you do not leave "Allow apps from outside sources" checked. If you have an apk you want to side load, go in and check the box, install your app, then uncheck the box. Second, pay attention to the permissions apps you are downloading are requiring. Can't figure out why a wallpaper app needs access to your entire phonebook? Neither can I and I would not install that app. Finally, Google has checks built into Android that will verify apps, and strengthened these checks in KitKat and the recent Play Store developer TOS update.
TL/DR: I'm not going to let an app constantly run in the background to prevent what a little common sense and reading app permissions will also prevent.
Because a little bit of common sense is all you need to avoid needing one and I do not want it running in the background using device resources and battery. Due to the way mobile OSs sandbox apps, a true virus is more or less impossible on mobile. So that means these "antivirus" software are actually anti-malware software. There are a few easy steps to avoid downloading malware on your device. First and foremost, make sure you do not leave "Allow apps from outside sources" checked. If you have an apk you want to side load, go in and check the box, install your app, then uncheck the box. Second, pay attention to the permissions apps you are downloading are requiring. Can't figure out why a wallpaper app needs access to your entire phonebook? Neither can I and I would not install that app. Finally, Google has checks built into Android that will verify apps, and strengthened these checks in KitKat and the recent Play Store developer TOS update.
TL/DR: I'm not going to let an app constantly run in the background to prevent what a little common sense and reading app permissions will also prevent.
I learned my lesson the hard way - not using an A/V app, my phone got hacked and caught fire. My house burned down and I had to go stay in an expensive hotel with my 5 cats, 2 dogs, 4 kids and wife. Now I don't use a smartphone anymore...
I recently unretired this one however and no one can hack me now!!!!!!
Now THAT'S what I call BAD luck
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