It was 2:00 AM. Alex made a cup of instant coffee and stared at the screen.

He plugged in an old USB stick he found in a drawer—the one that had infected him last month. Windows AutoPlay tried to pop up, but Kaspersky was faster. It didn't just quarantine the virus; it ran a "Disinfection" routine. A little green progress bar filled up, and a log appeared: kaspersky internet security 2013 review

But when Alex tried to visit a shady streaming site, the page loaded blank with a red Kaspersky banner: “Dangerous page blocked.” When a Java script tried to run silently in the background, Kaspersky killed it without asking. It was 2:00 AM

“Malicious URL detected. Download blocked. Object: Trojan-PSW.Win32.Fareit.” Windows AutoPlay tried to pop up, but Kaspersky was faster

This was where the review got interesting. He tried to run a legitimate game— StarCraft II . The firewall immediately blocked it. No silent allow. A popup asked: “Allow ‘StarCraft II’ to act as a server?” Alex didn’t know what that meant. He clicked “Allow and Remember.” The game stuttered for the first ten seconds, then smoothed out.

“Virus removed: Win32.Nimnul. Remaining registry keys: Cleaned. System status: Green.”