- Sep 4, 2003
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I was considering Kaspersky for a antivirus program until read these two things.
I truly think I'll forget using Kaspersky now and so should you for having it alter every file on your computer, this is not the job of Antivirus.
P.S. LOOK what happened to my desktop after I uninstalled Kaspersky:
http://img119.imageshack.us/my.php?image=screenshot1gi.jpg
From Cnet User Review
Of my many complaints, the primary one is that Kaspersky invades your system by writing data (under the header of KAVICHS) onto every single file on every partition you have. And if you are unhappy with Kaspersky as I was and decide to uninstall it, the information stays embedded in all of your files and is not deleted. Kaspersky quietly provides a tool that is supposed to remove this data, but it is a time-comsuming and irratating process if you have as many partitions and drives as I have. Kaspersky claims that the tags they add are informational only, however, I think the function of an antivirus program should be to prevent files being altered, not altering them itself.
From Kaspersky
I get a message about "KAVICHS" when deleting files.
Version 5.0 of Kaspersky Anti-Virus for Windows operating systems uses technologies iChecker (for FAT32 partitions) and iStreams (for NTFS partitions). Because of these technologies each file is checked for viruses only once - during the first scan. During all subsequent scans the file is not scanned for viruses provided that it has remained unchanged since the last scan. Thus, the anti-virus program performance increases drastically after the first file scanning, compared to previous versions of Kaspersky Anti-Virus.
More detailed information about technologies IChecker and IStreams you can find here: Technologies iChecker and iStreams: how they work?
Message about 'KAVICHS' on each NTFS file is informational. It means that Kaspersky Anti-Virus service information was written into file's additional data stream. After uninstallation of Kaspersky Anti-Virus this information is not deleted, because it can be used with next installations of Kaspersky Anti-Virus. If for some reason you would like to delete these ADS tags, you can use a special utility. Klstreamremover.exe utility can clean ADS tags of files located on NTFS partitions from the service information, written by Kaspersky Anti-Virus.
To clean additional data streams (ADS tags) on NTFS partitions you need to do the following:
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download packed utility Klstreamremover.zip extract the file into root folder of the partition, where you plan to clean ADS
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run Klstreamremover.exe with parameter -r (for example go to menu Start -> Run -> here type c:\klstreamremover.exe -r and press Enter)
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wait until the utility finishes working
Important: if on your computer there are several NTFS partitions the described above steps you will have to do for each partition of your hard drive.
Important: you need to make sure Kaspersky Anti-Virus is uninstalled prior to running of the utility.
I truly think I'll forget using Kaspersky now and so should you for having it alter every file on your computer, this is not the job of Antivirus.
P.S. LOOK what happened to my desktop after I uninstalled Kaspersky:
http://img119.imageshack.us/my.php?image=screenshot1gi.jpg