![]() Both features are part of “Windows Defender Exploit Guard”. It’s designed to stop malware by only allowing trusted programs to modify files in your personal data folders, like Documents and Pictures. Windows 10’s Fall Creators Update also includes a related security feature named Controlled Folder Access. RELATED: How to Protect Your Files From Ransomware With Windows Defender's New "Controlled Folder Access" If you already have EMET installed, it will be removed by the update. EMET can’t even be installed on PCs running the Fall Creators Update. ![]() This feature is automatically enabled if you’ve upgraded to Windows 10’s Fall Creators Update, and EMET is no longer supported. In other words, they can protect against many zero-day attacks before they’re patched. They enable certain operating system protections and block common memory exploit techniques, so that if exploit-like behavior is detected, they’ll terminate the process before anything bad happens. Anti-exploit tools actually prevent many popular attack techniques from functioning at all, so those dangerous programs don’t get on your system in the first place. Typical antivirus programs, like Windows Defender itself, use virus definitions and heuristics to catch dangerous programs before they can run on your system. Microsoft’s EMET is widely used on larger networks where it can be configured by system administrators, but it was never installed by default, requires configuration, and has a confusing interface for average users. We’ve long recommended using anti-exploit software like Microsoft’s Enhanced Mitigation Experience Toolkit (EMET) or the more user-friendly Malwarebytes Anti-Malware, which contains a powerful anti-exploit feature (among other things). RELATED: What's New in Windows 10's Fall Creators Update, Available Now How Windows Defender’s Exploit Protection Works
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