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    Do you use Antimalware software in addition to Antivirus software?

    Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved IT Discussion
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    • DustinB3403D
      DustinB3403
      last edited by

      Well it's a matter of hours.

      If it takes 3 minutes to clean up(scan/remove/reboot/recan) malware on 1 PC and you have 20 PC's you're spending 1 Hour of IT time on managing a solution across those 20 machines.

      What's you're IT person's rate? For simple math lets use $25/Hour

      So the company has already spent $25 to clean up a known incident.

      If you want to regularly scan your systems for malware this would have to become a scheduled task. Which with the standalone versions, has scheduling, but still requires input from the IT person or user.

      So again back to weekly task, 20 computers at 1 Hour per week with a rate of 25/Hour, 52 weeks a year. You're look at $1300 a year.

      JaredBuschJ J 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 1
      • scottalanmillerS
        scottalanmiller @DustinB3403
        last edited by

        @DustinB3403 said:

        @WingCreative I would expect the Endpoint solution.

        Anything not centrally managed is just more costly to attempt to manage. At any size.

        Not at any size. And especially not if your end users are mostly technical. We do not use the centrally managed option, although I would like to see that added.

        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • JaredBuschJ
          JaredBusch @DustinB3403
          last edited by

          @DustinB3403 said:

          What's you're IT person's rate? For simple math lets use $25/Hour

          If the employee is making $25/hour, then the cost to the company is not $25/hour, it is higher.

          DashrenderD 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • DustinB3403D
            DustinB3403
            last edited by

            We aren't including the downtime of the system being worked on.

            Straight company cost to work on a group of devices.

            If the employees rate if $25/Hour and it takes 1 hour to complete, the company pays out $25. They don't pay for lost productivity. That's a backend cost that can't easily (and in this imaginary scenario) be quantified.

            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • DashrenderD
              Dashrender @JaredBusch
              last edited by

              @JaredBusch said:

              @DustinB3403 said:

              What's you're IT person's rate? For simple math lets use $25/Hour

              If the employee is making $25/hour, then the cost to the company is not $25/hour, it is higher.

              LOL, but you're missing the point of his post.

              JaredBuschJ 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
              • JaredBuschJ
                JaredBusch @Dashrender
                last edited by

                @Dashrender said:

                LOL, but you're missing the point of his post.

                I understand the point, but use more realistic numbers.

                The cost to the company for that employee will be at least $31.25 (125%) but I like to calculate rough numbers for unknown company structures at (150%) so that would be $37.50 to the company for that $25/hour worker.

                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • DashrenderD
                  Dashrender
                  last edited by

                  not to mention the 15 mins of interruption to that employee that you kicked out of his seat to do the 3 min job.

                  Since we're nitpicking the costs here, lol

                  1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                  • scottalanmillerS
                    scottalanmiller
                    last edited by

                    There is also the possibility that someone runs many of them, at once, after hours so the cost of the IT staff is much lower, possibly free if it is done with idle time from a help desk resource, and no non-IT staff are interrupted.

                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                    • donaldlandruD
                      donaldlandru @DustinB3403
                      last edited by

                      @DustinB3403 said:

                      @WingCreative I would expect the Endpoint solution.

                      Anything not centrally managed is just more costly to attempt to manage. At any size.

                      Maybe I am reading this wrong, but I think what @WingCreative was asking is the Malwarebytes Endpoint Security $50 vs Malwarebytes Anti-Malware for Business $30 , both of which have centralized management.

                      According to This comparison chart the only difference between the two is "Advanced anti-exploit protection
                      (Patent-pending exploit mitigation technology)"

                      Please correct me if I am wrong; however, I am not sure what "Advanced anti-exploitation" is other than a marketing term, let alone is it worth an extra $20 per PC .

                      W 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 3
                      • Reid CooperR
                        Reid Cooper
                        last edited by

                        I think that that was what he was asking. Here is the chart, if people can read it:

                        malwarebytes.png

                        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                        • W
                          WingCreative @donaldlandru
                          last edited by

                          @donaldlandru said:

                          @DustinB3403 said:

                          @WingCreative I would expect the Endpoint solution.

                          Anything not centrally managed is just more costly to attempt to manage. At any size.

                          Maybe I am reading this wrong, but I think what @WingCreative was asking is the Malwarebytes Endpoint Security $50 vs Malwarebytes Anti-Malware for Business $30 , both of which have centralized management.

                          According to This comparison chart the only difference between the two is "Advanced anti-exploit protection
                          (Patent-pending exploit mitigation technology)"

                          Please correct me if I am wrong; however, I am not sure what "Advanced anti-exploitation" is other than a marketing term, let alone is it worth an extra $20 per PC .

                          That's exactly the question I was asking, thanks for clarifying 🙂 Although I wasn't aware the $30/mo option had centralized management too!

                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                          • donaldlandruD
                            donaldlandru
                            last edited by

                            @scottalanmiller since you are the only one who has said they are running this. I have a couple questions that I think add value.

                            1. Are you running MBAM for Business, MB Endpoint, or some other flavor that us mere mortals don't have access too?
                            2. If using MB Endpoint can you qualify what "Advanced anti-exploit protection" is?
                            3. What is your take on Malware protection on production Windows servers (AD, file, print, SharePoint, etc) -- is it required?

                            According to the techspecs they say the product is unsupported on server core installations, I would think any Windows device is susceptible to malware if one tries hard enough.

                            upload-a7e76958-46c1-4069-91ba-36fec4697a9a

                            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                            • J
                              Jason Banned @DustinB3403
                              last edited by Jason

                              @DustinB3403 said:

                              If it takes 3 minutes to clean up(scan/remove/reboot/recan) malware on 1 PC and you have 20 PC's you're spending 1 Hour of IT time on managing a solution across those 20 machines.

                              Central management doesn't play to much in cleaning, yes it can still do it automatically as does standalone endpoints. but you really should still have a technician touch a computer that has had an infection.

                              DustinB3403D 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                              • DustinB3403D
                                DustinB3403 @Jason
                                last edited by

                                @Jason Of course you should for confirmation, but the point of any centrally managed solution is so that you don't have to.

                                You push updates, you push scans, you push removals, and even system restarts.

                                J 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                • J
                                  Jason Banned @DustinB3403
                                  last edited by

                                  @DustinB3403 said:

                                  @Jason Of course you should for confirmation, but the point of any centrally managed solution is so that you don't have to.

                                  You push updates, you push scans, you push removals, and even system restarts.

                                  Centrally managed doesn't mean you don't need to confirm, that's not the point. The point is alerts. And also ease of deployment in a large environment.

                                  That's not how centrally managed AV works. It does not "push" definition updates. The AV client pulls them, you might have a local cache of updates, but it's still pulling them and you don't generally pick and choose. You can push scheduled scans with GPO's even with standalone endpoints.

                                  1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
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