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Zemana AntiLogger Giveaway
$39.5
EXPIRED

Giveaway of the day — Zemana AntiLogger

Block all known and unknown internet threats. Also allows bank, shop and browse the Web safely and privately.
$39.5 EXPIRED
User rating: 659 132 comments

Zemana AntiLogger was available as a giveaway on March 5, 2009!

Today Giveaway of the Day
$35.00
free today
Let BeeConverter endow your video with vitality!

Keep your PC free from Trojans, Bots, Viruses/Worms, Keyloggers.

Zemana AntiLogger has the technology to make financial transactions very secure by providing Advanced behavioral protection against the very latest and unknown Spyware and Password Stealers known as Malware.

  • Secure Your Internet Banking and Safe Online Shopping
  • Secure internet banking and financial transactions
  • Protect your information in Emails and Instant Messages
  • Protect keystroke you enter
  • Protect all screen images
  • Fully compatible with Windows Vista and XP

System Requirements:

Windows 2000/XP/Vista

Publisher:

Zemana Ltd.

Homepage:

http://www.zemana.com/list/list.aspx?ktgr_id=411

File Size:

4.39 MB

Price:

$39.5

Comments on Zemana AntiLogger

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Please add a comment explaining the reason behind your vote.
#132

http://www.teakolik.com/antilogger-campaign-90-day-zemana-gift/

90 days zemana licance and download feee.

i like zemana

http://download.zemana.com/Products/AntiLogger/AntiLogger_OEM_TEAKOLIK_1.9.2.126.exe

Reply   |   Comment by Blıue  –  14 years ago  –  Did you find this comment useful? yes | no (0)
#131

what the
im getting a message from anti keylogger saying i need to buy a new subscription

Reply   |   Comment by reblerebel  –  15 years ago  –  Did you find this comment useful? yes | no (+2)
#130

I love this app but it keeps crashing for a variety of reasons. The last time it crashed, it sprinkled my hard disk with file errors. When I used chkdsk to repair the errors, my system wouldn't boot! I'm fortunate that I image my system and data with regularity. As much as I don't want to, I'm afraid that I'm going to have to uninstall this jewel. I can't really blame the software because I really don't know why its crashing. I have a lot of stuff installed and I don't want to trouble shoot it so I guess I can't use it. :(

Reply   |   Comment by J Lutgring  –  15 years ago  –  Did you find this comment useful? yes | no (+1)
#129

If something is UNKNOWN, then by definition it CANNOT be protected against. IMHO, any software that says it will "protect" me from unknown attacks is a waste of time. That is the problem with AV/AS software is that it is reactive instead of proactive. Maybe one day these pimply-faced punks will get tired of writing all this malicious software and get real jobs.

Reply   |   Comment by wiggumc  –  15 years ago  –  Did you find this comment useful? yes | no (+1)
#128

Kind of looks to do the job but is there somebody who can tell me what is the difference between this prog & Online Armor which is the firewall i use & which i have configured to report all processes?

Reply   |   Comment by lei  –  15 years ago  –  Did you find this comment useful? yes | no (-1)
#127

#97, windowsexplorer, I didn't see your post until today. A number of security applications which include firewalls have the ability to block outgoing strings. You'll simply have to check your ZoneAlarm documentation. If you want to keep the same firewall, you can search for add-on security utilities, but I'm doubtful that you'll find anything, since this issue is primarily a 2-way firewall function.

As for other types of data, like credit card numbers, bank accounts, social security numbers, passwords, etc., I keep that information encrypted, don't let browsers store it, and use a password manager. It would be too inconvenient to block those with a firewall.

Reply   |   Comment by Fubar  –  15 years ago  –  Did you find this comment useful? yes | no (+1)
#126

I installed this ap in Vista 32. No problems. It works quite well. I tried out the security test files with Antilogger enabled and disabled. When it is enabled, Antilogger intercepts all of the security tests. When disabled, neither of my paid security apps (Norton Internet Security 2009 and Sana Security Primary Response)even flinched when the files were ran, leaving me completely open for these types of security problems. Great Application. I love it.

Reply   |   Comment by J Lutgring  –  15 years ago  –  Did you find this comment useful? yes | no (+1)
#125

I downloaded this program last night. As I was shutting my system down it told me that something "was trying to write itself to my start menu". I had to make a decision and opted to block the program. ...It turns out that I 'need' that program.

Does anyone know how to 'unblock' blocked items?

I cannot open various other programs now and cannot surf the web. I have to load and reload to get web pages to open.

...I did create a restore point on my computer before installing this program; thank goodness...

Reply   |   Comment by Kay Moi  –  15 years ago  –  Did you find this comment useful? yes | no (0)
#124

After loading the application, I put the license key and the connection timed out. I got an activation error. I tried to activate using the browser and it had an error saying to enter a 32 digit offline license key. But all I have is the one that came in the zip file when I downloaded Antilogger. This happened at 10pm EST. Now it is over and I have a trial version. Now what?

Reply   |   Comment by Lloyd  –  15 years ago  –  Did you find this comment useful? yes | no (+1)
#123

Hey guys,
it took too long for you to figure out the software is Turkish!!
When you install it there are two languages offered : English and Turkish!!

Reply   |   Comment by Mario  –  15 years ago  –  Did you find this comment useful? yes | no (0)
#122

Unfortunately would not install on Windows 2000
in spite of system requirements saying w2k compatible.
Install program said XP required...

Reply   |   Comment by Glen McCready  –  15 years ago  –  Did you find this comment useful? yes | no (+2)
#121

It seem to do exactly what it says,however,i noticed my pc slowed down significantly,so i had to uninstall.If it wasn't for this factor i probably would've kept it as a "security back-up".

Reply   |   Comment by kevino  –  15 years ago  –  Did you find this comment useful? yes | no (+3)
#120

If people are installing this (or any other program) with other programs still running (including browsers especially ones that are not part of Windows), that is probably causing a lot of the problems that are being reported above, as witnessed by the comment in 116 about closing the browser to restart (when it should already be closed).

Reply   |   Comment by windowsexplorer  –  15 years ago  –  Did you find this comment useful? yes | no (0)
#119

"It's only free for a year" ???

Gimme a break! I've never seen so many cheapskate whiners in one place at one time! :(

Zemana Antilogger is an ESSENTIAL security add-on, no matter what AV you're using!

I'm not downloading the freebie because I licensed it months ago, but if you don't grab a copy while it's free, you have rocks in your head!

Reply   |   Comment by SAFFR0N  –  15 years ago  –  Did you find this comment useful? yes | no (-1)
#118

Downloaded on XP S3 and it works fine.

Reply   |   Comment by sash_x  –  15 years ago  –  Did you find this comment useful? yes | no (0)
#117

I almost failed to download this great software because of the nasty rumors and negative reviews of people who apparently didn't know what they were talking about. To those who had bad experiences with the program, I'm sorry it turned out that way. In my case, I had no problem installing the software and getting a free one-year license afterwards. So far so good. The performance is comparable to Threatfire that I used before but proved too resource heavy for my computer. I became even more convinced after reading the expert review of Snapfiles.com which gave it four out of five stars. Thanks GOTD for a job well done. As always, you have never disappointed me!

Reply   |   Comment by George  –  15 years ago  –  Did you find this comment useful? yes | no (0)
#116

perfect installation, can scan programs trying to inject code into your systems, A++++

Reply   |   Comment by ed  –  15 years ago  –  Did you find this comment useful? yes | no (0)
#115

It's exelent

Reply   |   Comment by Haym  –  15 years ago  –  Did you find this comment useful? yes | no (+1)
#114

What is the "Antilogger Install Helper Executable" ? I cannot find anything so far on their site that explains what it is or what it does. It is an exe file in the program's folder after the app was installed.

Reply   |   Comment by Spiritwolf  –  15 years ago  –  Did you find this comment useful? yes | no (+1)
#113

It appears to me that the program not allowing you to choose which drive, etc to install it on, is a bug in the installer since the (grayed out) "change" button is there even though it doesn't work. Seems the developer needs to fix this bug.

I hate software that requires you to restart the pc, especially when restarting prevents you from being able to copy and paste the license key to register the software. This means I have to shut down everything I was working on, just to reboot to be able to register the software before the giveaway ends, go reopen the downloaded file and copy the registration key and register the program, and then go reopen all the webpages I had open, etc.

Reply   |   Comment by Spiritwolf  –  15 years ago  –  Did you find this comment useful? yes | no (+3)
#112

Doesn't work in Windows 2000 as advertised in system requirements.

Reply   |   Comment by John Wellborn  –  15 years ago  –  Did you find this comment useful? yes | no (+2)
#111

@ the hacker Ping returning or not? And you are a hacker? ROTFLMAO watcher13 not that you need any advise but I don't think anyone has to be worried about being hacked!

@ Karel, do your own test review if your not satisfied with someone else.

This software use's the same method of detection as Threatfire. To get around false positives all you have to do is know your software and know what your downloading. Research the developer because there's nothing wrong with that.

A simple rule of thumb to go by in software as well as life is "If in doubt,,,,DON'T!

Reply   |   Comment by Archangel  –  15 years ago  –  Did you find this comment useful? yes | no (+2)
#110

It says
Fully compatible with Windows Vista
So, I install it and it said it's not compatible with Vista 64 bit
Then kicks me out of the install
I love it when company's say their products run on all platforms.
They lie like a rug.
I see this a lot
Who Can You Trust to Tell The Truth

Reply   |   Comment by james0622  –  15 years ago  –  Did you find this comment useful? yes | no (0)
#109

Thumbs up/down fiddled today then??

I clicked on thumbs down and it changed to 216, Clicked on refresh and it went to 215...Mmmmm!
Reason I gave this thumbs down was if we're led to believe EVERY anti-virus/Spyware/Malware, Keylogger program found things each individual title did'nt, We'd have no space left to do anything else (or use a PC for anything else because of memory hogging resident programs running!

Why not simply purchase a re-set card (plug into PCI slot and a pin has to be entered on start up to actually write anything to the Hard Drive)
Any problems, restart and everything nasty has vanaished...perfect for clicking on what you may think is a dodgey link.

Just Google Red Reset Card, I believe there's a USB version now that's even better...Who needs anti-ANYTHING with one of those :-)

Reply   |   Comment by Mohammad Patel  –  15 years ago  –  Did you find this comment useful? yes | no (0)
#108

# 100

for people who are bitching about no key…
read the “read me” with the program
Comment by Vaughn Whynot — March 5th, 2009 at 5:57 pm


Normally, I agree with you, though maybe using different terms. Today, I have the slight problem that the license key is not working here the way it is supposed to.

Reply   |   Comment by John Handel  –  15 years ago  –  Did you find this comment useful? yes | no (0)
#107

I am having problems with this. I took the license from the Readme file, and I am getting the message:

The license information you entered was probably mistyped.

Pleas re-enter the license code exactly as it appears in the license you received.

Key: GIVEAWAYOFTHEDAY-0309-M

--------------------------------------------------------

I took a straight copy and paste from the activation program (after the reboot) and from the readme, neither worked.

Reply   |   Comment by John Handel  –  15 years ago  –  Did you find this comment useful? yes | no (+1)
#106

I agree with you Igor. Anything can be hacked, and, if you want to work that hard, you can easily set up to send your attacks out to those non-responses. But, has it changed so much from the old days? I'm still operating under the assumption that most hackers are looking to send out their attacks to the machines that respond. If the machine is "safe", the attack doesn't work. If there's no firewall, or it's off, the attack works. In the old days, most people didn't know what a firewall was and it certainly didn't come with Windows. Today, it comes with Windows and a lot of people still don't know what it is. And a lot don't even know whether it's on, what it will do, and whether or not it's had a bunch of holes punched in it over time. And everyone agrees, the Windows firewall is hardly rock solid. So, I still suspect that your ahead of the curve, Igor, and most of the threats to me are from the old fashioned folks whose automatic attacks just assume a ping not returned is lost and ignore it. Their attacks are looking for the confirmed IPs. If not, why ping at all. You could just send out your attacks to any IP you can detect or randomly to every conceivable IP one at a time. Just like a telemarketers random automatic dialer. Is there a difference about what response you get? Why not just send the attack?

Reply   |   Comment by watcher13  –  15 years ago  –  Did you find this comment useful? yes | no (0)
#105

#72 and #105

Can you explain the crashes in detail here please -
- reluctant to install due to these notes - thanks

Reply   |   Comment by Jake  –  15 years ago  –  Did you find this comment useful? yes | no (0)
#104

If you need something similar and recommended by a bank itself, you guys should try the one available on ingdirect website. I use it. It is free. http://home.ingdirect.com/security/security.asp?s=SecurityTools.

Reply   |   Comment by vcx  –  15 years ago  –  Did you find this comment useful? yes | no (0)
#103

#72 -- I had the same problem. I run Vista -- Just got my system back this morning after GREAT GREAT hassles !!!

Reply   |   Comment by Danny  –  15 years ago  –  Did you find this comment useful? yes | no (0)
#102

You morning people who whine when there are "no comment" but your comment appears about 7th on the list, really annoy me. There are no comments posted yet because they are "awaiting moderation" you comment doe it too, use your head once in a while before you complain. I don't care how many thumbs up or down there are, and whether or not it's justified.

Reply   |   Comment by Nolan  –  15 years ago  –  Did you find this comment useful? yes | no (+10)
#101

GIVE AWAY ? ? ? 15 day give away. Who wants to advertise for someone that isn't giving ya anything? It did nothing when I rebooted and tried a few programs I use most often and went to a few web sites. Then I deleted it. I dont have time for a 15 day trial when apparently what I have already paid for is doing its job.

Reply   |   Comment by Frank  –  15 years ago  –  Did you find this comment useful? yes | no (-11)
#100

This sounds a lot like ThreatFire, which is a pretty decent program & free too.

Reply   |   Comment by Nbrege  –  15 years ago  –  Did you find this comment useful? yes | no (+2)
#99

#89, karel, I don't need "all of my knowledge" to answer you. I reported exactly what I observed. AntiLogger didn't see TimeSnapper Pro taking screenshots every six seconds, it didn't see other screen-capture utilities, it saw almost none of the keyboard and clipboard monitoring (several programs monitor my clipboard) which Sticky Password sees and reports in great detail (although Agnitum sees Sticky Password's scanner as a process memory access, therefor I usually don't use Sticky Password's scanner due to this realtime-scanner incompatibility). It doesn't protect itself like software of this type should (Outpost Security Suite does). Outpost Security Suite already monitors several of the key areas AntiLogger claims to protect (other programs monitor some, including Windows Defender and Anvir). When I updated Outpost today, I used AutoRuns to keep AntiLogger from running. I noticed some significant slowdowns and there was one crash, so I then used AutoRuns to keep AntiLogger's service from running. While I didn't specifically verify that the problems were caused by AntiLogger's service, there have been no such issues since disabling it. As for some dude named Raymond, I don't read his blog, and he's clearly no expert if he doesn't even notice the obvious problems with AntiLogger. And no, I didn't test AntiLogger with the tests on AntiLogger's own site, when it's clearly designed to see its own tests. I tested it on a real-world system which is presumably clean, and it didn't see the things that it claims to see by programs which aren't even specifically designed to be malicious and circumvent its protections, and I did have its settings set to provide more rather than fewer alerts.

Reply   |   Comment by Fubar  –  15 years ago  –  Did you find this comment useful? yes | no (+17)
#98

for people who are bitching about no key...
read the "read me" with the program

Reply   |   Comment by Vaughn Whynot  –  15 years ago  –  Did you find this comment useful? yes | no (0)
#97

I see quite a few people saying that this program does what a firewall does. But a firewall will not protexct you from a keylogger. So this program can come in handy if you're unsure about downloading another program from another site, because this can tell you if it's a keylogger or conatains any other malware, ect

Reply   |   Comment by Pr3mium  –  15 years ago  –  Did you find this comment useful? yes | no (+2)
#96

After several hours consideration, I've decided to try it again (but only after doing a thorough backup beforehand). Installs fine on XP+SP3, got the year licence via the Services link on the interface, and it froze again with the same program that caused that problem first time round (GameHouse game).

So far it's only asked about setting rules for a couple of programs and the system hasn't fallen over (yet).

Reply   |   Comment by Christina Williams  –  15 years ago  –  Did you find this comment useful? yes | no (+2)
#95

#75 Fubar--Is Agnitum Outpost the only thing that will block strings such as your email address or are there other options? For instance, I am using ZoneAlarm Security Suite and would like to use its firewall to block my email address from going out without my knowing it if it has that capability. I generally like my ZASS and am paid up for the next two years, so I don't want to have to go in another direction if I can help it by using what I already have or by adding something both free and compatible with ZASS to what I already have and do it that way. I agree with you , they never should havemade it possible for a website to request personal information from your browser without our approval.

Reply   |   Comment by windowsexplorer  –  15 years ago  –  Did you find this comment useful? yes | no (+7)
#94

@watcher13

> I’ve got to upgrade my Firewall to something like Comodo or Zone Alarm,
> because they block out incoming queries and I think being “invisible”
> is you’re best defense on the net.

You're totally wrong! Invisibility is not existent. When a computer is not online, the server will respond: "no machine behind this IP address". And when a safe computer is online, it will send my Ping back. But if I don't get a answer from the computer or the server means there is a private computer with a stupid software-firewall. Okay, let's start to have fun! :-)

Reply   |   Comment by Igor, the hacker  –  15 years ago  –  Did you find this comment useful? yes | no (-3)
#93

Well, I tried. Downloaded from GAOTD, inzipped and installed. Copied the license number, TRIED to start the proggy but it said a Restart was necessary so Restarted. Clicked to open the proggy and ONLY got a screen that said License Expired... PAY the $40, Renew Later or Don't Show This Screen Again. One takes me to the pay page, the others just close the Renew screen... never did/would the proggy start to be able to put in the GAOTD key... Maybe next time...

Reply   |   Comment by olamoree  –  15 years ago  –  Did you find this comment useful? yes | no (-4)
#92

Great software! Thumbs up.

Reply   |   Comment by Glb  –  15 years ago  –  Did you find this comment useful? yes | no (-2)
#91

Lu Hulu. A quick answer for you because I think it's a common misconception. GOTD is not a software recommendation project. It's basically a marketing project. Although, I'm sure they do some testing, it's not the kind of testing for quality you're referring too (unless just for their own use, which they'd be inclined to keep to themselves). They probably just test for spyware and basic function, and maybe to make sure the install key routine is compatible/workable. I imagine GOTD would consider the software of any developer that's willing to pay the price, as long as they don't detect anything sleazy. That's not a criticism; people just misunderstand the business model. It's not to offer the last word in software for free, it's to give newer developers a chance to get some word of mouth, whether they're ready for the big time or not.

Fubar, I though you were omniscient! LOL! Maybe you're next technical post should be on what that person was smoking! What made that person think you were even challenging Raymond at all?!? I still think that some of Zemana's friends are lurking aroung here. Never mind that. Thanks for all the good comments you post here.

Reply   |   Comment by watcher13  –  15 years ago  –  Did you find this comment useful? yes | no (+5)
#90

Nice stuff.its free...if u want better than this one go to website and buy something

Reply   |   Comment by Hunter  –  15 years ago  –  Did you find this comment useful? yes | no (-10)
#89

I just plain don't like the name of this software, its weird and scary! Because of that, I must pass on this one.

Reply   |   Comment by Debbie  –  15 years ago  –  Did you find this comment useful? yes | no (-10)
#88

#75 fubar

Thanks for taking the time to answer me. Very informative answer. Think I will download the trial and go from there.
Your answers are always informative. They obviously come from experience and a great knowledge of computers.
I get so tired of the so called "expert reviewers" who only copy and paste what they find from real reviewers and take credit for actually knowing something. There are lots of comments that are valid and from experienced users here but they don't overdo it.
Anyway , thanks again.

Reply   |   Comment by joe  –  15 years ago  –  Did you find this comment useful? yes | no (+11)
#87

@53 Fubar
This time you are way out of line.

Do you estime yourselve better than Raymond?
From reading your comment you certainly do.

Read Raymond's test results and try to answer and correct those.

You'll need all your knowledge to come close to an decent reply.

best regards,
karel

Reply   |   Comment by karel  –  15 years ago  –  Did you find this comment useful? yes | no (-20)
#86

Why not try WinPatrol, also free:
http://www.winpatrol.com/

Or Winsonar, again, also free:
http://digilander.libero.it/zancart/winsonar.html

Both programs are HIPS/IPS and work amazingly well! I have tried them both and am undecided on which I actually like better. I run WinPatrol on my laptop and Winsonar on my desktop. Both are excellent programs that are NOT resource hogs and catch everything I have thrown at them so far. As with any HIPS/IPS they are a pia at first until you get them setup. But then your protection is flawless.

Reply   |   Comment by DigitalDevo  –  15 years ago  –  Did you find this comment useful? yes | no (-1)
#85

Just a note for those who say it is on a 15 day trial, you need to enter the key that is in the read me. Enter it under the services in you program. I have vista and it installed fine. :D

Reply   |   Comment by missmolly  –  15 years ago  –  Did you find this comment useful? yes | no (+6)
#84

@6 Its funny because spy ware doctor is well known however last year they were sued for false claims and actually infecting PC's in order to force people onto their paid services, just because this company is not a well known name doesn't mean their rubbish,

I could image that you said that about norton, avast, avg etc when they first came out!!

Get the point!?

Also, I have tested this and while it didn't pick up some of the seriously nasty Trojans etc its good for the normal computer user who doesn't download illegal content from dodgy websites :)

I give it a thumbs up,

Regards







Craig

Reply   |   Comment by Placehold  –  15 years ago  –  Did you find this comment useful? yes | no (-1)
#83

I wanted to try this on two different computers, one with XP and one with Vista, but they're both 64-bit. Why does this software require a 32-bit OS?

Reply   |   Comment by David  –  15 years ago  –  Did you find this comment useful? yes | no (-9)
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