This setting keeps you safe without being intrusive to the leisure activities you enjoy. While you’re gaming you will not be interrupted by any Malwarebytes notifications that would normally pop up on your computer. When your 14-day trial ends, this is one of the services that won’t be available until you purchase the premium version. This browser guard keeps you safe for shopping, signing up for services, and any other tasks you need to complete. The Web Protection blocks scams, phishing sites, infected sites, and malicious links. The application goes beyond protecting you from malware by preventing phishing and fraud while you shop online. However, if anything happens to the company and they liquidate assets, your information would be sold to the purchasing company. Malwarebytes says that they’ll only provide this to law enforcement or to meet security and information standards. However, the program does collect personal information, which may alarm users. This personal data includes your name, address, contact details, and banking information. Malwarebytes 4.0 protects your private information from hackers that use viruses or other malicious code to infect your computer and steal this information without your permission. In place of seeing generic names that most anti-viruses display, you’ll see a short description of what the malware that’s detected is and what it can do to your computer. But the second/MBAE license was accepted, and is now formally registered to me.Malwarebytes main usage to catch and prevent malware from appearing on your computer. The first/MBAM license was rejected, indicating that someone else had already registered that license. Today, I tried to register/store my license information online. ![]() Ironically, it's showing up as being used on two other systems that I had installed it on, but NOT on my current/primary system! ![]() But the second/MBAE license was accepted, and is now formally registered to me. So I then tried to enter my second "lifetime" license, which I got for beta-testing very early versions of MBAE. When I tried to re-enter the same license information, it was no longer accepted. Then, a few months ago, it happened again. and so they reactivated it on my system(s). I contacted MBAM, and was able to offer them "proof" of the license that I had been awarded. Everything worked fine for a few years, until one day, I noticed my MBAM had reverted to "free" from "premium". at least 5 people were offered the same license/registration information. If I'm not mistaken, that particular license was issued to us beta testers as a "shared" license. The first was for beta-testing very early versions of MBAM 1.x. In my case, I had two "lifetime" licenses. It's probably for the best to set up an MBAM account, where you can register/store your license. ![]() It is permitted to transfer that license from one system to another, by deactivating the license on the first, before activating it on the second. but version 3.8 started checking and enforcing the one-machine license as it was intended. ![]() Versions of MBAM prior to 3.8 "overlooked" this. It seems the problem is that people were purchasing a license that was valid for a single machine, but then applying it to multiple machines, concurrently.
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