50 Kaspersky
Anti-Virus
®
5.0 for Windows Workstations
key activation. After your license expires, the product will operate, but
you will not be able to update the
anti-virus database
and
application
modules
.
M
Maximum protection
– the level of computer security which corresponds to
maximum possible protection, leading to a certain performance de-
crease.
O
OLE object
– objects or documents embedded in other files using the OLE
technology.
Q
Quarantine
– a special data storage designed for isolation of suspicious ob-
jects.
Quarantining
(moving to a quarantine folder)
– a method for treating a
suspicious object
which involves blocking access to the object and mov-
ing it to a quarantine folder for subsequent treatment.
R
Real-time protection
– a mode of application functioning in which the appli-
cation resides permanently in computer memory and monitors calls to
file system objects. Prior to granting access to an object, the application
scans it for virus presence and, if a virus is detected, the application dis-
infects the object or removes it or blocks access to it (depending upon
the settings you have defined).
Recommended level
– the default level of anti-virus protection with settings
recommended by Kaspersky Lab experts which ensures the optimal
balance between performance and protection.
Recovering, restoring
– moving an original file from the
quarantine
or
backup
folders to a specified destination folder or to its original location,
where it was stored before quarantining, disinfection, or deleting.
Reserved license key
- a license key which has been installed to enable
proper functionality of Kaspersky Anti-Virus but has not yet been acti-
vated. This reserved key will be activated as soon as the license pro-
vided by the current key expires.
S
Startup objects –
a set of programs that are necessary for launching and
correct operation of the operating system and other programs installed
on your computer. Your operating system launches these objects during
each startup. Some viruses attempt to infect the startup objects and can
cause a startup failure.
Suspicious object
– an object that contains either a modified code of a
well-known virus or a code reminiscent of a virus, but not yet known to
Kaspersky Lab.