this post was submitted on 17 Nov 2023
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So... That means the current only way to keep the main system is through Virtual Machines?
Honestly, I wouldn't even trust them. If the malware's goal is to get into your local network it will have achieved that on a virtual machine. And as far as I know there have also been ways to break out of a virtual machine. Probably fixed by now, but who knows what else lurks there.
Just don't run software you don't trust.
I don't trust in any Windows Application at all, but I think this doesn't mean I need to live under a rock. This is the reason because I open this Post. So thank you for you help and your time :) You are very cool.
I think is a good option play videogames in a Virtual Machine when is possible. But I just want to feel "more secure" when I need to play in my host machine, for example, using sandboxing.
There's a difference between telemetry/tracking which can at least be limited using an isolated VM, and malware which will attempt to take over your computer/network, so it really depends on why you don't trust the program.
Imo, if you just want to run a program that's made for windows (and you trust that it isn't malware), then a VM or potentially even wine by itself would be sufficient. If you want to run something you think might be malware, don't. No amount of virtual isolation will guarantee protection from malware.