Can't Install OBS due to Avast Antivirus using the files

Xentus

New Member
Per Title and attached screen cap, can't install OBS due to Avast using the files (for some reason). Anyone know why this is occurring or at least how to fix such that it won't compromise my PC's security?
 

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AaronD

Active Member
Antivirus programs have done a very good job at keeping people paranoid so that they stay in business. You really don't need them now.

Yes, there are still plenty of threats, but the operating system itself, and its regular updates, keep on top of them...provided that you don't hang out on shady sites or download/install everything that strikes your fancy.

It didn't used to be that way, hence the market for third-party protection.

If you want to keep it, fine, but it's also fine to just turn it off. My experience, both with and without, indicates a ton of false positives, and no real threat anymore, that gets past an up-to-date OS itself and good internet practices.
 

Suslik V

Active Member
You can use portable version of OBS, just unpack the OBS files to the new folder and follow steps mentioned for example here (to make the installation portable):

Antivirus programs usually has special settings to whitelist (exclude from scanning) any user application. You may try this feature - it useful for OBS, because OBS itself capturing your screen and thus it's "suspicious" activity from the view of the security software.

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Yes, there are still plenty of threats, but the operating system itself, and its regular updates, keep on top of them...provided that you don't hang out on shady sites or download/install everything that strikes your fancy...
YouTube channel Linus Tech Tips in the video from 24.03.2023 titled "My Channel Was Deleted Last Night" says other things.... In short - it's still an user factor.
 

AaronD

Active Member
YouTube channel Linus Tech Tips in the video from 24.03.2023 titled "My Channel Was Deleted Last Night" says other things.... In short - it's still an user factor.
One of his employees clicked on a (well-written, for a change) fake sponsorship offer, that took advantage of their not having logged out. I've always explicitly logged out of everything, which force-expires the session, when I'm done, to prevent exactly this kind of attack. Now I have something to point to, to explain why:

Still don't need explicit AV. Just be suspicious of so-called "convenience", and be careful what you click on. Not in a sense of paranoia, but in a sense of, "I don't need," or, "It's not attractive."

And, yeah, anytime a stranger offers you something, there's gonna be a catch. Sponsorships are NOT trophies! It only happened in LTT's case that the catch was...something different.
 

Suslik V

Active Member
I've always explicitly logged out of everything, which force-expires the session...
even from your smartphone accounts? You rock!

Anyway, if user got OBS from the https://github.com/obsproject/obs-studio/releases or other official sources - it's likely free of any malicious code, so it can be whitelisted. Of course, it has build-in browser... but this is other story. For some reason user prefers Avast to Windows Defender, so suitable workaround I see here is to whitelist the application.
 

Lawrence_SoCal

Active Member
As for 3rd party AV.. I've largely given up as well... HOWEVER, to Aaron's list I'd start with - I also do NOT log on with local admins privs (and haven't for almost 30 years.. since NT4 days). Going pretty much anywhere on the Internet (due to compromised ads, even from most reputable sites) or email, and having local admin rights is just asking to be compromised.

I almost always use an InCognito/InPrivate browser session, don't save site USN/pwds, etc. And my browsing from a phone is almost zero. I do browse on iPad, but again almost always in Private mode, close tabs, etc.

Anything valuable online should have 2-factor enabled
 
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