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Autorun Eater 2.5 Freeware Download and Review

Friday, October 08, 2010 12:20:47 PM (US Mountain Standard Time, UTC-07:00)

    Autorun Eater 2.5 is very similar to Panda USB Vaccine and USB Disk Security in that it prevents USB or any removable disk viruses from automatically being executed on a target system.   The best part about Autorun Eater and unlike USB Disk Security,  is that Autorun Eater is completely free and even has more features than its competitors. 


    Autorun Eater is published by Old McDonald Farm (not kidding the actual name of the company).  One will be greeted with pictures farm animals upon installation.  Regardless of the animal references Autorun Eater performs its job excellently.   The programs install file is only 1.3 megabytes in size and installed quickly.  The resident shield billy.exe uses approximately 1 megabyte of ram to completely secure a system.   The resident shield constantly monitors any drive that is inserted into a computer in practice.

    Again its crucial to have some form of autorun detection.  Standard free antivirus and even expensive Internet Security Suites do not include auto run protection.  Why they don’t is beyond me, however with autorun protection, one can proactively stop a virus rather than have it completely infect one’s system and have to deal with a major clean up later.  
Autorun Eater 2.5 includes several nice features.  One  can change the priority of a detection to high or low, one change set whether an infection is removed automatically or asked for a confirmation, one can set trusted removable drives  which to ignore when they are reinserted, and more.  Autorun Eater 2.5 also includes a handy utility to fix the task manager, regedit, or folder options if they are corrupted by another virus.

    Some users report that free antivirus such as Avast and Avira have reported that Autorun Eater as a virus.  The publisher has reported that this is in fact false positive activity.  Also many users have also confirmed that this program is definitely not a virus.  Just wanted to give everyone a heads up if they are prompted by their antivirus.