![]() ![]() Performing a scan tells you in real-time any malware it finds, gives them to you in a list, and can be immediately moved to quarantine for review or deleted. The app also allows more advanced users to perform tasks like running other command line utilities, install their own antivirus engine, etc. The preferences are also fairly easy to go through and set up, setting up simple tasks like what to do if the app detects a virus, email alerts, scheduling scans, etc. There’s also a list of quick folders to scan, though you can always set up other scans, even your whole hard drive. Really simple, with big buttons labeled for starting and stopping scans, updating the definitions, and preferences. ClamXav not only adds an easy user interface, but also has a sentry feature that actively watches your files for any suspicious activity. But Clamav has traditionally been run as a command line program, simply meaning there’s no easy buttons to push. ClamXav takes that engine and lets it run on OSX (hence the X in ClamXav). ![]() ClamXav is based on the popular Clamav, a commonly used, open source antivirus on Linux, as well as Windows. ![]() I see all of these things and plenty of security in ClamXav.ĬlamXav is an open source antivirus for Mac. And open-source also tends to lead to innovation. It also means anyone who knows any code can generally take open source software and change it to their needs, so long as they give at least some reference to the original code. Open-source is almost inherently a community activity. Part of it is certainly that open-source stuff tends to be free (LibreOffice, Firefox, just to name a couple), but it also helps bring people together. I am a fan of open-source, no doubt about it.
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