F5F Stay Refreshed Software Operating Systems Protection on Windows remains active in real time.

Protection on Windows remains active in real time.

Protection on Windows remains active in real time.

Z
Zoaxh
Member
147
09-04-2016, 06:40 AM
#1
He provided me with a Windows 10 laptop for work, replacing his older Windows 7 system. Most functions are operating normally, but some custom programs created for research keep getting blocked and removed by Windows Real-Time Protection each time I reinstall them. I've tried disabling Real-Time Protection temporarily, editing the registry for Tamper Protection, modifying group policies, and adding exclusion folders to Windows Defender. What additional steps could help?
Z
Zoaxh
09-04-2016, 06:40 AM #1

He provided me with a Windows 10 laptop for work, replacing his older Windows 7 system. Most functions are operating normally, but some custom programs created for research keep getting blocked and removed by Windows Real-Time Protection each time I reinstall them. I've tried disabling Real-Time Protection temporarily, editing the registry for Tamper Protection, modifying group policies, and adding exclusion folders to Windows Defender. What additional steps could help?

A
63
09-12-2016, 02:51 AM
#2
Have you explored Defender's protection history and enabled the app directly? You can do this by opening the related entry > Actions > Allow on this device.
A
ArrowGaming_YT
09-12-2016, 02:51 AM #2

Have you explored Defender's protection history and enabled the app directly? You can do this by opening the related entry > Actions > Allow on this device.

M
Maluwtf
Junior Member
37
09-12-2016, 07:07 AM
#3
Currently, completely disabling the defender is nearly unachievable. However, you should be able to configure file and folder exclusions for the relevant items.
M
Maluwtf
09-12-2016, 07:07 AM #3

Currently, completely disabling the defender is nearly unachievable. However, you should be able to configure file and folder exclusions for the relevant items.

I
igna777
Junior Member
21
09-18-2016, 11:29 PM
#4
Usually, antivirus programs mark any executable that comes as a bundled package (with DLLs and other files inside, plus resource files like images, text, and icons). This is the main cause of false positives.
I
igna777
09-18-2016, 11:29 PM #4

Usually, antivirus programs mark any executable that comes as a bundled package (with DLLs and other files inside, plus resource files like images, text, and icons). This is the main cause of false positives.

A
Auztn
Member
163
09-19-2016, 01:08 PM
#5
I'll attempt this. I also tried including all executable extensions in the protection exclusions. If your approach succeeds (restoring from history), I'll inform you.
A
Auztn
09-19-2016, 01:08 PM #5

I'll attempt this. I also tried including all executable extensions in the protection exclusions. If your approach succeeds (restoring from history), I'll inform you.