Hallo, justamel. to the "kennels".
I appreciate where you're coming from. There has been a lot of stuff in the media about Linux 'malware' recently.
The fact remains, however, that the best protection for Linux still boils down to 3 things:-
Unfortunately, many of the recently reported exploits are aimed directly at the kernel itself.....and no amount of AV/anti-malware software can help you here, since it cannot, by its very nature, touch "kernel-space". It's not allowed to.
The best protection for that is to keep your kernel up-to-date.....and the Linux kernel team are very much on-the-ball with all that stuff. Patches are usually released within 24 hrs, sometimes sooner.
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Running Puppy, you have additional protections, due to Pup's unique method of operation. Running in RAM as it does for the duration of the session confers some unique abilities.
"Mainstream" distros all save stuff back to your hard-drive immediately. Puppy saves configuration changes & newly-installed stuff back to what is known as a 'save-file;, which is 'layered into' Puppy's union aufs file-system at boot. You can set this to save at regular intervals.....or you can set this up so it only saves when you manually tell it to.
The upshot being that, if you think you've been compromised during a session, for whatever reason, you can choose NOT to save.....and at power-off, the session just disappears into cyberspace. At next boot, you start-off again with a squeaky-clean, brand-new Puppy, loaded-in from read-only files.
You cannot get much more fool-proof than that.
As you can see, for Puppy at least, Linux AV is, at best, completely pointless. At worst, it's a waste of time & resources.....
Mike.