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Immunet Antivirus: A Quiet Layer of Defense That Doesn’t Get in the Way There’s a certain kind of antivirus tool that doesn’t try to take over. It just sits in the background, uses barely any system resources, and quietly checks what’s coming in. That’s Immunet in a nutshell.
It’s cloud-based, light on CPU, and — this is rare — it doesn’t fight with other antivirus products. In fact, it was built to work with them. Defender, Bitdefender, Kaspersky — Immunet doesn’t care. It watches anyway.
It’
GlassWire Free: When You Need to See What Your Network’s Up To — Visually Sometimes it’s not about blocking threats. It’s about knowing what’s happening on your machine — who it’s talking to, what it’s sending, and whether it’s doing it behind your back. GlassWire Free helps you see that.
It’s part network monitor, part firewall interface, part visualizer — and all about giving you a clearer picture of your traffic. Everything is wrapped in a slick, user-friendly UI that even non-security folks
OSArmor: Because Sometimes Blocking Is Better Than Cleaning Up Traditional antivirus kicks in after the malware lands. OSArmor doesn’t wait that long.
Instead of chasing known signatures or depending on cloud detection, it watches how things behave. Scripts in the wrong folders? Macros spawning PowerShell? EXEs running from AppData? It stops that cold — even if no one’s seen the file before.
There’s no engine. No scanning. Just rules, hooks, and one job: block suspicious actions before they tu
Maltrail: Catching Suspicious Traffic Without Building a SIEM Sometimes you just want to know if something weird is happening on the wire. Not set up a full packet pipeline, not deploy a cluster of log processors — just… know. That’s where Maltrail quietly steps in.
It’s a lightweight, open-source network sensor that watches DNS requests, IP connections, and packet headers for signs of trouble — using threat lists, heuristics, and a bit of common sense. All without agents or deep packet inspect