Kaspersky and its thousands of open network connections

JMB1911

Member
Dec 22, 2009
66
2
71
I recently upgraded my router and installed DD-WRT. With access to new monitoring tools I have been noticed a lot (4,000 to 5,000) connections from some of my computers.

Well I tracked it down to Kaspersky. Disabled Kaspersky the 4,000 open connections from that 1 computer drop to something reasonable, like 3.

Anyone know what the deal is? Should I drop Kaspersky for Bitdefender
 

Ketchup

Elite Member
Sep 1, 2002
14,559
248
106
I have run Kaspersky trials over the years (as recently as this year) and there was always something about them I didn't like: some bogged down the system too much, some wouldn't shut up, some had a way-too restrictive firewall, some loved to block legit web pages. I always ended up running the stock Windows Defender and run a 3rd party scan every once in a while.
 
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lxskllr

No Lifer
Nov 30, 2004
60,015
10,515
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Another vote for Defender. I use gnu/linux, but windows machines I manage only use defender. I've had too many issue with a/v, one of which I suspect required a reinstall of the o/s(I opted to use xubuntu instead).
 

Puffnstuff

Lifer
Mar 9, 2005
16,200
4,883
136
I recently upgraded my router and installed DD-WRT. With access to new monitoring tools I have been noticed a lot (4,000 to 5,000) connections from some of my computers.

Well I tracked it down to Kaspersky. Disabled Kaspersky the 4,000 open connections from that 1 computer drop to something reasonable, like 3.

Anyone know what the deal is? Should I drop Kaspersky for Bitdefender
I dropped them a couple of weeks ago in favor of Norton Security 2017 Deluxe which has improved my system performance. BT would probably be a better experience for you over their software not to mention the fact that they are a Russian company which makes me wonder what else its doing. I would never install the banking portion of it as I felt uneasy about it.
 

Elixer

Lifer
May 7, 2002
10,371
762
126
All these AV programs snoop on you, everything is scanned, and these days, everything is reported back to HQ. This wasn't always the case, but now, it is.
That is the nature of the beast trying to detect what is bad vs what is good.

I stopped using AV programs and just use virustotal.com (or...) for files I download if I have a question about their origin. I also disable JS and don't use flash on sites.
I also have a FW enabled for both incoming and outgoing connections, and manually allow/deny them.
Then do the occasional malware scan. Never had a issue for years now.
 

DaveSimmons

Elite Member
Aug 12, 2001
40,730
670
126
At least with Microsoft your data is going to the NSA instead of the KGB. Also, Microsoft has an incentive to keep Windows running properly while AV companies make money off of fear of infections.
 

EXCellR8

Diamond Member
Sep 1, 2010
4,066
901
136
heard something on the radio this morning about Kaspersky allegedly making some social media sites easier for spies to hack. the lab denies it of course, but who do you listen to these days?
 

Puffnstuff

Lifer
Mar 9, 2005
16,200
4,883
136
At least with Microsoft your data is going to the NSA instead of the KGB. Also, Microsoft has an incentive to keep Windows running properly while AV companies make money off of fear of infections.
They sure do like how Norton hits me up with a popup warning me of the Wi-Fi hack and offering to sell me even more protection.
 

Mike64

Platinum Member
Apr 22, 2011
2,108
101
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At least with Microsoft your data is going to the NSA instead of the KGB. Also, Microsoft has an incentive to keep Windows running properly while AV companies make money off of fear of infections.
Frankly, since I'm a US citizen (only), living in the US, if I were concerned about either of those particular actors doing me personal harm (and I'm not), I'd be way more concerned about the NSA than the KGB. As a practical (let alone legal) matter, short of sending out a black ops squad to off me (which seems unlikely, to put it rather mildly) or even putting a (squad of) capable, malevolent hacker(s) on my tail (which seems only slightly less unlikely), there isn't much the KGB can do to me. The NSA and its, er, " associates" on the other hand... (And for that matter, the same goes for the mainland Chinese, and any other "evil foreign power" du jour...)
 
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JMB1911

Member
Dec 22, 2009
66
2
71
Frankly, since I'm a US citizen (only), living in the US, if I were concerned about either of those particular actors (and I'm not), I'd be way more concerned about the NSA than the KGB. As a practical (let alone legal) matter, short of sending out a black ops squad to off me (which seems unlikely, to put it rather mildly) or even putting a (squad of) capable, malevolent hacker(s) on my tail (which seems only slightly less unlikely), there isn't much the KGB can do to me. The NSA and its, er, " associates" on the other hand... (And for that matter, the same goes for the mainland Chinese, and any other "evil foreign power" du jour...)

When the NSA/CIA needs more funds they increase opium production in one of the war torn nations they control.

If the KGB needs more funds, they'll just empty bank accounts.
 

Mike64

Platinum Member
Apr 22, 2011
2,108
101
91
When the NSA/CIA needs more funds they increase opium production in one of the war torn nations they control.
Not to mention the longer-term ploy of selling arms to random insurgent groups freedom fighters around the world, who'll use them to eventually form significant enough "US adversaries" to justify demanding (and getting) massive (and of course, classified) budget increases from Congress... <sigh> (Not that I"m suggesting they're far-sighted, or even quite that devious, enough to do that intentionally, mind you, it just seems to be one of the "benefits" of their SOP.)

And the other hand, sometimes the KGB uses the somewhat more sophisticated ploy of helping more or less random thugs become billionaire "plutocrats", knowing they'll be shake them down rely on them to fund various and sundry activities like fixing elections and murdering smoothing over minor annoyances like political opponents that show signs of gaining significant public support.<Yet Another Sigh>
 
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