Filtering profiles can be associated with users. Within age categories are content categories, such as drugs or violence. Parental controls were introduced, with specific settings for different age categories, such as "child" or "parent".
PC World described the new interface as "intuitive" and "great-looking". Components were renamed and reorganized the Anti-hacker module was renamed to the Firewall, and the Anti-Spy module was integrated with the Privacy Control module. RAM and CPU requirements are dependent on the operating system. 50 megabytes of free space, Internet Explorer 5.5, and Windows Installer 2.0 are required.
KIS 6.0 supports Windows 98 SE, ME, NT Workstation 4.0, 2000 Professional, XP Home Edition, XP Professional, XP Professional 圆4, and Vista. Both CNET and PC World criticized the suite's relatively high retail price, US$79.95. Features such as parental controls and instant messaging protection, found in competing suites from Symantec and McAfee, were not a part of version 6.0. The magazine found the graphical user interface to be awkward to navigate.
The firewall blocked all attacks from inside and outside the computer when tested. However, data is cached from each scan, making each subsequent scan faster. PC World also highlighted the suite's false positives - eight of 20,000 clean files were incorrectly flagged as malicious - and its noticeable impact on computer performance. However, version 6.0 was criticized for not completely removing malware by leaving Registry entries and files. KIS has the ability to scan within compressed or packed files, detecting 83.3 percent of the "hidden" malware. The suite detected almost 100 (99.57%) percent of adware samples. KIS detected 100 percent of threats on a subset of the January 2006 wild-list, a list of prevalent threats. PC World magazine praised version 6.0's detection of malware. Version 6.0 was the first release of KIS. Hope this was helpful and good luck.Windows edition Version 2007 (6.0) Here is the link to the command line options for trying to pull from the client.
That was on eight and we had nothing but problems trying to upgrade to ten. It was a nightmare and the reason I will never recommend Kaspersky to any of my clients. What worked for us was a complete uninstall of the server, removing orphaned registry entries and program data, waiting till the next day for replication to finish, then reinstalling the server, and re-configuring the policies from scratch. My boss was not going to do that in fear it would cause more problems with replication and so on. Their suggestion was moving the PDC emulator role to the DC hosting the Security Center. Kaspersky support was sort of unhelpful in our situation. It would work on our standalone clients by making an exclusion for the tvnserver.exe but trying the same thing in the server version wouldn't work. Is this a domain setup? Is the Security Center installed on a DC? I ask because I've had similar problems in the past. If the policy is active and settings are not being pushed to the clients perhaps try pulling them from the server. Quite possibly I am missing something really silly, but I just can't figure this one out. I have uninstalled the client, rebooted and reinstall, but no luck there either. So far I have configured a firewall rule between both sites that enables access via all the ports listed on
I have checked a few that have supposedly pulled down the policy and cannot see the exclusion rules or trusted apps that I added.įurther to that, I have tried to allow tightvnc the ability to interact with the endpoint application(So that I can click the Support/Licence buttons and start manual scans etc), but those settings are not pulled down either. It's a strange one as the policy shows in KSC10 as having been enforced on most of the computers. I have made changes to the Kaspersky endpoint policy(added exclusion rules and trusted applications in the General Protection Settings) that are not then pulled down by the clients in office B. I have KSC10 located in office A, with a number of clients in office A and office B.