We weren't, but maybe, honestly, there was probably 10% truth there. We got a new business manager, and he decided that all the admins were spending all day playing on their desktops instead of actually working. So were hooked into the major corporate services. ) through a network resident server for Windows applications. We all ran our corporate desktop services (mail, calendar. And there were some very significant services being managed.Īll the professional administrators chose their own desktops, and mostly used Linux. It was large enough that there were separate teams for multiple Unix variants. Absolute ♥♥♥♥-tier AV.Click to expand.About 20 years ago I was looking after Unix systems for a service provider. Hell, standard C bytecode (at least used to) get flagged all the time. If you use Avast\avg (any FREE antivirus really, you get what you pay for), they tend to go with the philosophy of: "Everything is bad, unless we have deemed it isn't". Most gamers\users also don't know how to set up custom rules in whatever firewall they use, let alone asses how safe software is, and blindly trust their AV to make the correct judgements, so reviews are also not the most legit, or sound sources for safety advice.Īlso agree with the dev. Hell we've had games that legit doesn't work, as the dev forgot to include the actual executable (Steam rarely, if ever, quality check or ensure something works, "not their job"). We've had cryptominers and rootkits on here before, it happens. Being on Steam is in no way proof of safety. There's no way it would be so positively reviewed or even let on Steam if it was actually a virus.Īs Destal said. Originally posted by Shadowdragon.TTV:yeah.
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