Saturday, 11 July 2020

How to fix common windows defender won’t scan issues?

Windows Defender, integrated into Windows 10, run's in the background & scan's your files for malware. to improve performance for tasks like compiling code or running virtual machines, you can add an exclusion and Windows Defender will never scan those files.
Exclusions can also help if you’re running into false positives where Windows Defender marks legitimate files as malware.
Warning: be careful about what you exclude. Windows Defender won’t scan your excluded files and directories for malware. You wouldn’t want to exclude everything in your Downloads folder, for example!



First, we need to launch Windows Security to change some settings. Open the start menu and type “Windows Safety.” Then, select the “Windows Security” app.

In Windows Safety, navigate to “Virus & Threat Protection.” Then, click “Manage Settings.”

In “Virus & Threat Protection Settings,” scroll down to the very bottom of the page, & click “Add or Remove Exclusions.”

On the Exclusions page, you can add or remove file's that you want to exclude from Windows Defender scans. to add an exclusion, click the “Add An Exclusion” button beside the big plus symbol (+).

A small menu will pop up allowing you to define your exclusion by File, Folder, File type, or Process.

What you choose depends on what type of exclusion you're trying to create. Here’s what each choice does.

File: If you select this, a box will pop up allowing you to browse your computer to select a single file that will be excluded from future scans. Select the file you’d like, then click “Open.”
Folder: like the File option, this will let your browse your computer for a specific folder to exclude from scans. The folder’s contents and subfolders will be excluded as well.
File type: A box will pop up asking you to enter a file extension (e.g., “.MID”) representing the file type that you’d like to exclude. All files of that type will be excluded from future scans. This one is dangerous because you might accidentally exclude a large class of potentially hazardous files, such as PDF or DOC files.
Process: A pop-up will ask you to enter the name of a process (a running program, i.e., “explorer.exe”) to exclude from scans. If a certain program you know is safe keeps getting flagged by Defender, you can enter it here.

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