According to reports, this story begins at an entirely unscientific moment: Zhou Ziye, a designer who rose from creating counterfeit mobile phones, suddenly time-traveled back to the year 1984.
...Upgrade to the latest version online and use online technology for online virus scanning.
While the core technology of Dami Protection Online is useful, its most fundamental flaw is that it is itself a Trojan horse program.
It's the most deeply hidden feature; it pops up every time you boot up, first scanning your system disk to let you know if your computer is safe.
Despite the fact that it slows down the boot time, many users like to do this because they feel safe to use the computer, mainly because they are afraid of viruses.
Who replaces hardware so easily when their computer gets a virus?
If the computer can be turned on and scanned, it means it can still be used. Let the customer gradually get used to this pace.
When a separate notification appears prompting you to scan the entire disk, that's when the user's computer data will be uploaded.
This disguise is not easy to detect. Even if you do find it, you won't be able to see anything even if you open the package and check. The crucial core has been packaged as a security core.
Unless you ban its use, what kind of viruses can you possibly detect?
The number of Shield Security installations is increasing, world-class viruses are being eradicated, and a large number of users in Europe, America and North America are beginning to resume normal use.
But another phenomenon has emerged: rice-making machines are in high demand, and the price of used machines is twice that of new ones, and there's no stock available.
The new phone is priced but unavailable. Of course, once a new phone is released, it won't be priced the same; the black market price will be even higher.
What causes this? The rice processing equipment is not easily infected by viruses when it is turned off. Even if it is infected, the rice can be processed in a very short time.
Unlike Intel and Microsoft machines, which are helpless and can only tell you to replace the hardware or the operating system.
You think the data on your computer is worthless?
Some die-hard rice fans have even demanded the resumption of rice sales and after-sales service during this global virus crisis.
The needs of this group will not be met. Selling rice will impact local electronics companies. Furthermore, rice-based computers, mobile phones, and other devices are unsafe. This is a strategic issue, a matter of a broader scale.
If you can't afford overpriced grey market goods, it just means you're poor. If you were rich, you'd be flying to some desert country to buy them already; even India sells them!