Re: Free security software 'as good as commercial brands'
* John Whitworth:
> "MICHAEL" <u158627_emr2@dslr.net> wrote in message
> news:um6OEUW7HHA.2476@TK2MSFTNGP05.phx.gbl...
>
>> This may be true of Norton and McAfee products, it is not true for NOD32. The best AV
>> there is. Period.
>>
>
> I'd beg to differ. It turned my father's PC to treacle. It (NOD32) was one of the more
> highly acclaimed ones last year...but a recent PC Pro review put it rather low
> down...OK...not as low as Norton! ;-)
>
> I personally use AVG, Windows Firewall, Windows Defender and my router's hardware firewall.
> I then periodically use Ad-aware and Spybot S&D.
http://www.virusbtn.com/vb100/archive/results?display=summary
ESET has achieved 45 Virus Bulletin VB100 Awards, more than any other vendor.
http://www.av-comparatives.org/
"NOD32 is the leader in Advanced+ awards, having received top honors
in each of the last five tests. This represents the most proactive malware detection
capabilities of all the products tested over the last 12 months."
http://www.consumersearch.com/www/software/antivirus-software/
Best antivirus software for experts. Reviews unanimously agree that NOD32 is as good as or
better than Kaspersky Anti-Virus in all but one area: Reviews say NOD32 has a very hard-to-use
interface. Although computer experts say NOD32 offers great protection, no system drain and no
software conflicts, most users will be confused by its unintuitive and confusing interface and
controls. That puts NOD32 out of contention for anyone but sophisticated computer users.
http://anti-virus-software-review.toptenreviews.com/eset-nod32-review.html
Effectiveness:
The most important function of antivirus software is to detect and block viruses, and Nod32
does an excellent job. This software received the VB100% award in June 2007, was certified by
ICSA in 2007 and passed the level 1 & 2 Checkmark from West Coast Labs.
http://www.pcworld.com/article/id,129883-page,2-c,antivirus/article.html
When a Signature Isn't Enough
The heuristics approach looks inside a potential piece of malware, but behavioral analysis,
another proactive-protection technique, looks at it from the outside to see how it runs. If a
file behaves suspiciously, such as by executing from a temp directory, antivirus programs may
flag it as potential malware.
Some newer, advanced types of behavioral methods create what's called a sandbox, in which part
or all of a suspect program can be analyzed in a protected virtual environment. The top two
performers in our proactive tests, which subject PCs protected by month-old signatures to new
malware to simulate future unknown threats, rely on the sandbox approach. Eset's NOD32 program
intercepted 79 percent of malware, and BitDefender Antivirus 10 stopped 61 percent. On the
other hand, Grisoft AVG finished last, at 34 percent, despite using a sandbox.