• long running

Norton Identity Advisor Plus 1 Year Subscription $84.99 (Was $99.99) @ Norton

03
1DENISONID

Introducing Norton's identity protection offering - Norton Identity Advisor Plus.No better time quite like the present to digitally protect your personal information.

This pack provides:
Dark web monitoring
Social media monitoring
Identity Restoration Support, and
Identity Theft Insurance (up to $58K combined)

1st year subscription price $99.99 , available for $84.99 by using the promo code 1DENISONID
This is a long-running deal, so kindly marked as 'long expiry'.

To redeem the exclusive discounted price:

  • Click on the link
  • Click on 'Subscribe now' CTA
  • Use promo code "1DENISONID" on the payment page

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Comments

  • +9

    Optus and Medibank edition?

    • Beat me to it

  • I'm not as known in my neighbourhood.

  • +13

    Lol Norton

  • +5

    🤣🤣🤣

  • +7

    tasty bloatware

  • +1

    Any social discount for people identified in all three Medibank AHM and Optus?
    Trippe whammy

  • +1

    Norton my watch, jks aside im good

  • +3

    Member Since
    25/11/2019
    Statistics
    1 posts / 0 comments

    What’s with these marketing accounts that sit dormant for years and then suddenly makes a post? Are they accounts that were never used and have now been compromised for spamming?

    • +1

      before that they're here for the very reason everyone else is: cheap eneloops and Big Man Tyron jokes. oh, and jv

      • Surely you don't need any account for that.

    • +2

      sleeper cell

  • 84 bucks to pay this one? Yeah Nah Qatar

  • +3

    I wonder if it detects itself as malware…

  • +8

    I reckon this should be flagged as a scam.

    People who don’t know better, who really need protection are only opening themselves to grief and drama installing this software.

  • When i read the title, i thought this was a gender identifying thing that can tell you if you're *********** or not. Has a puzzling look on the picture…

  • +3

    Ah yes… I see Norton is still preying on people who have no idea just how secure Windows is these days.

    Expensive subscription bloatware and nothing more, completely unnecessary.

    • preying on people who have no idea just how secure Windows is these days.

      Oh super secure as always

      https://www.bleepingcomputer.com/tag/patch-tuesday/

      The last secure Windows was 3.1

      • Bring back win 3.1 lol

        • +1

          win 3.11 introducted networking, the tool of the devil.

      • +3

        Windows 10 / 11 is leagues ahead when it comes to security than older versions of Windows.

        Quoting a link to patch Tuesday articles only goes to show there is a regular update cadence, correcting found vulnerabilities. I would be more worried if there wasn’t a regular cadence of security updates.

        Or you can choose to put you tin foil hat on and believe that the last secure version of Windows was 3.1. Must be a fun world to live in.

        • +2

          than older versions of Windows.

          Slow clap.

          I’ll stick to comparing it to Linux and macOS.

        • -1

          Quoting a link to patch Tuesday articles only goes to show there is a regular update

          No MS has conditioned people to think that because they release 60-100 security patches every month that they care about security and they're secure. Yet they keep repeating the same types of security mistakes as they always have because they're sloppy. Privilege elevation, security bypass, remote execution. At least there's fewer buffer overflows.
          ,

          Of course MS doesn't have bugs, just undocumented features

          • +1

            @M00Cow: The real problem with Windows is they keep polishing a turd. Changing the UI and making small and incremental improvements.

            Jobs made the right decision back in 2001 when Apple started completely fresh, switching to a Unix based OS.

            • @PainToad: Yep, but then I wouldn't have paid off my house if MS had of done that ;-)

              Personally I prefer PC's as I like tinkering and we used to joke Mac's are computers with the training wheels welded on. Apple have always been slow with new features, doing gradual upgrades, which tend to be much less buggy. MS have always been bigger on change for the sake of change and security has always taken a back seat.

              Quite funny when someone recently reminded me of Steve Ballmer claiming Windows XP is the most secure OS ever. Turned out to be the opposite. But it probably is one of the longest widely used ones. Versatile yes, secure no.

          • @M00Cow:

            Yet they keep repeating the same types of security mistakes as they always have because they're sloppy. Privilege elevation, security bypass, remote execution.

            You do realise how complex a modern day operating system is, don’t you? If you did, you might realise how many individual components are part of the operating system, and how security vulnerabilities can affect individual parts of the operating system.

            Again, all you have done above is list categories of vulnerabilities. And again, I’m glad the vulnerabilities we are talking about, that impact operating systems are from those categories. The alternative, is for them to be unknown or new types of vulnerabilities.

            And that is what is truely scary.

            • @NinjaChicken:

              Again, all you have done above is list categories of vulnerabilities.

              Yep, known area's of vulnerabilities, yet rather then audit these areas and patch them in advance, they wait for them to be found by honest researchers before fixing them, sometimes.

              You do realise how complex a modern day operating system is, don’t you?

              Yep, and I know instead of re-writing the OS and getting it right, they're just add, patching, improving(?) on exisiting code since WinNT. They should have started from scratch on Windows 7.or 8 or 10.or 11.

              The alternative, is for them to be unknown or new types of vulnerabilities.

              And MS have a history of sitting on vulns, leaving their customers at risk. Ask any Exchange admin. Look at Print Nightmare, look at the Office Messaging Encryption (which wasn't even encrypted, kist scrambled). Bring Your Own Vulnerable Driver , which took 3yrs to patch.

              You can be an MS apologist, but if you actually knew half.of what you think you know, you'd probably have a different opinion. Personally, I've been delighted by MS sloppiness, it's been paying the bills, the bank, the beers for many decades, probably before you were twinkle in your father's eye.

  • I know everyone is talking about installing stuff. But what on earth in this pack even NEEDS to be installed? It's all just monitoring they should do from their servers.

  • +1

    Rorton

  • +1

    Sure I'll take one, please invoice Optus / Singapore Telecommunications Limited for me and supply me with a registration code as soon as possible so I can monitor my data currently on the darkweb as per the Optus unsecured API data leak.

    Do you need my email for the registration code, or will you be sending it to me via DM? I can provide my email address or it might be easier to search on the darkweb, it's all there.

    Thank you.

  • +1

    Peter Norton would be rolling over in his grave, if he were dead…and if he hadn't made sh!tloads of cash by selling his name/products.

  • :D

  • I don't know why, but I found myself reading all the terms & conditions for this product. Urgh.

  • +1

    Seems very expensive for Aus number one bargain website. More like spam & just using Ozbargain for free advertising.

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