Avast Premium Security V23.9.6082 -build 23.9.8... ❲COMPLETE❳

Default settings are chatty. You will get popups for: “You’re protected,” “Wi-Fi Inspector scan complete,” “New driver update available,” “Try our VPN for 70% off.” Fix: Go to Settings → General → Personal Privacy and disable all marketing offers. After that, it’s quiet.

This feature alone justifies the premium price. Even if malware gains admin rights, Avast blocks any unauthorized process from modifying your Documents, Pictures, or custom-selected folders. I tested this by trying to save an encrypted test file—denied instantly.

Previous Avast versions were notorious for drag. This build is lighter. A full scan took 38 minutes on a 512GB SSD (vs. 52 minutes in v22). Background idle scans are nearly unnoticeable on modern CPUs (Intel i5 or Ryzen 5+). Where It Stumbles (The Cons) 1. The “Smart Scan” is Mostly Marketing Do not click “Smart Scan.” It mixes real security checks (malware, outdated software) with “cleanup” suggestions (junk files, broken shortcuts) and a VPN upsell. New users might think their PC is broken when it’s just Avast pushing add-ons. Avast Premium Security v23.9.6082 -build 23.9.8...

4/5 Recommendation: Buy a 1-year license on sale (never pay full retail). Avoid the “Smart Scan.” Disable notifications immediately. If you can do that, you’ll be extremely secure.

After testing Avast Premium Security v23.9.6082 on a Windows 11 machine for two weeks, the verdict is clear: this is enterprise-grade protection for the home user. It catches what others miss, but it’s not a “set and forget” solution. 1. Flawless Malware Detection Independent lab tests (AV-Comparatives, SE Labs) consistently rate Avast near the top, and this build delivers. During my tests, it blocked 100% of real-world exploit attempts, phishing URLs, and ransomware simulators. The Behavior Shield caught a script-based attack that slipped past Windows Defender. Default settings are chatty

After installing, run a full “Boot-time Scan” (Menu → Protection → Virus Scans → Boot-time Scan). It catches rootkits that active Windows can’t see.

Unlike the basic Windows firewall, Avast’s component monitors both incoming and outgoing traffic. It flagged three legitimate apps (a game launcher, a VPN client, and a system updater) trying to “phone home” to suspicious IPs. You have full control to block or allow per application. This feature alone justifies the premium price

The idea is great (block unauthorized camera access), but in practice, it blocks legitimate apps like Zoom or Discord until you manually allow them. There’s no temporary “ask me” mode—it’s either block or allow.

Verdict: 4/5 Stars – A feature-rich heavyweight that stops threats cold, but demands patience during setup.

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