There is some "conventional wisdom" that Apple supports the current system plus the two previous, but this is not an official stance from Apple and it's unclear whether this is actually true. Regarding the question of security vulnerabilities, any version of macOS that isn't the absolute latest will have vulnerabilities. They almost certainly will interfere with each other as they compete to scan new files at the same time. Lastly, you don't want both Malwarebytes Premium and Webroots real-time/on-access protections to both be enabled. Webroot does provide browser protection, so that could be causing those spinning beach balls, but there are other factors that may be more responsible. There are extensions available for Firefox and Chrome that might have a slight impact, but not Safari. Malwarebytes for Mac itself does not impact browser use at all, except for scanning anything you download. About all I know is that it hasn't performed that well in testing reviews that I've come across. I'm sorry that I'm not very familiar with Webroot and have never used it, so can't say for certain whether it's causing issues for your or not. macOS Security Update patches were discontinued over two years ago. As you probably know, Apple anti-malware support of El Capitan is currently limited to background updates for Gatekeeper, XProtect and MRT (Malware Removal Tool) as long as you have "Install system data files and security updates" enabled in System Preferences->App Store. I don't know enough about your computer skills and practices to give you a completely accurate answer, but in general you should be reasonably well off without and additional anti-malware (viruses are just one form of malware) software. Endpoint Detection & Response for Servers
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