Malwarebytes Free Trial !!HOT!!
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For 14 days, Malwarebytes Premium for Windows will keep malware from infecting your computer for free. After that, if you do nothing it reverts to a limited scanner that detects and cleans up malware infections only when you run a manual scan. You can upgrade to the Premium version any time to continue with real-time protection against malware, ransomware, malicious websites and more. Keep threats off your system.
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I just got malware bytes for free because i was worried. Turns out it blocked 6 malware I got today by accidently going to a website. When my free trial ends, can those 6 viruses still attack me? or will malwarebytes protect me from the viruses. I am very worried.
Any threats in quarantine cannot attack you. However, once the trial expires the program will revert back to the free version which can still clean and remove an infection after the fact but it will no longer actively block and prevent the attack in the first place.
Hi there. Yesterday I checked Malwarebytes and it said that there was an program update. I clicked on it and afterwards, a similiar process to when I first installed Malware bytes two months ago repeated including choosing language. Afterwards I also found that I had the Premium free trial for the next 14 days now for the 2nd time even though it had expired two months ago? Is this a bug?
Actually, DaleDoc answers the issue quite nicely. Neither the installer, nor the actual trial page linked to, mentions the OPs exact problem. having already used a Trial period, and without uninstalling, installed a new version over the existing expired trial period, the trial period reset itself.
Free antivirus can be a good starting point to protect your devices. Malwarebytes offers free versions to scan and clean viruses and malware from your devices. Paid antivirus software like Malwarebytes Premium gives you on-going protection against viruses and malware, rather than just scanning and cleaning when you think your device might be infected.
Malwarebytes free version will clean malware from your Windows PC or Mac computer. Malwarebytes Premium gives you real-time protection against malware, ransomware, and other online threats. Compare the free version with Malwarebytes for Windows and Malwarebytes for Mac, and check out our mobile protection with Malwarebytes for Android and Malwarebytes for iOS too. We also offer Malwarebytes for Chromebook.
I downloaded free version free 2 days ago . All it is showing is 14 day free trial. What happens when 14 days are up? Is there still a free edition that will be working or does it just stop. A con to get you to use it and automatically graduate to premium. I used a different system before and got charged for the trial. Dont want anything to happen like that!!
After the 14 day trial is over, the Premium version will convert to the Free version. You will no longer have active protections, however you can still perform manual scans and remove any malware that Malwarebytes finds. There will always be a Free version available.
If you really don't want the trial then instead of going through and disabling all of the Premium features, you may instead simply deactivate the trial which will completely eliminate all of those features via a single control. Instructions on how to do so can be found in this support article.
With that said, the idea of the free trial is simply to allow free users to take the Premium version for a test drive to see how they like it in the hopes that they might decide that it is worth purchasing, which many of them do (though not all of course, which is why an option to deactivate the trial exists in the first place as it was deliberately put there by Malwarebytes' Developers to allow users the choice to terminate the trial if they prefer to remain using just the free version/features). The decision of whether or not to use the trial or to purchase a license/subscription is entirely up to the individual. The trial simply allows everyone to see first-hand what the Premium version has to offer so that they may make an informed decision about whether or not to purchase the product. The reason trials are periodically reset is due to the fact that as new versions are released and new features are added, much can change with regards to what the Premium version has to offer, so users who perhaps have continued to use the free version for a long time may reassess that decision in light of the changes that have been made in the most recent release. This is especially true when a new major component to protection is added for example or when the UI has undergone a large scale change.
That is a perfectly good explanation, and in full disclosure I can now recall that I've used the deactivation setting in the past - after looking it up online, because it wasn't clearly offered on the dashboard. I suppose today I just didn't have the patience to look it up again, so I went Neanderthal instead and just stomped all over the real-time protection features. Which, and this is not a minor detail, were indeed clearly shown and highlighted on the dashboard, probably as they are the primary point of the trial version.
I am offering this report of my own admittedly ridiculous actions as a voluntary set of user behavior data, for Malwarebytes to maybe take into account in future marketing decisions. I don't intend to turn this into some entitleder-than-thou crusade as I'm fully aware that the free version is, well, free. Duh. I am deeply thankful for living in an era when highly useful tools are offered by people far smarter than myself, either for free or in exchange for frankly hairthin inconveniences like some advertising here and there.
However (you knew the "however" was coming, it always comes after the dude goes on a tirade on what a happy camper he is), I am also a stickler for offering users clear options and respecting their decisions. Failing to ask if I want the trial version before installing the update is a breach of that. Failing to offer a one-click option to deactivate the trial version once installed is another breach.
I plan to continue using the free version of Malwarebytes as I'm a perfectly satisfied, er... customer, if I even qualify as a free rider. I'm even open to the possibility of purchasing the premium version, if it ever becomes necessary. Which hasn't been the case so far (and I'm kind of ancient, so my "so far" is getting pretty long). But these occasional marketing gimmicks, I can't help seeing them as gimmicks. So when someone pushes me, however mildly, I push back. Miiiildly.
Correct, as it is it typically takes 3 clicks to disable the trial, however just to play devil's advocate here, I'd argue that its placement is quite logical since, technically speaking, a trial 14 day license is still technically a license, so the same page where the function to activate/deactivate a full license is where the function to activate/deactivate the free trial belongs (especially if one were seeking to avoid users who do not intend to deactivate the free trial accidentally doing so by placing it on the primary Dashboard tab where the software's primary functions and information reside, including the main "Scan Now" button as well as the protection options, which themselves are collapsed beneath an expandable menu by default just to avoid accidental deactivation; although the user receives immediate feedback in the form of notifications and alert status were they to disable protection accidentally even if disabled from the Dashboard, so that's slightly less risky of a proposition). 2b1af7f3a8