Wednesday, 2 August 2017

Microsoft Wants A Slice Of The Antivirus Pie

Click here to view original web page at in.pcmag.com


Antvirus companies are feeling the heat, now that Windows 10 is slowly encroaching on their domain of expertise. With Windows 10, Microsoft made many sweeping changes but the most important of all them was the inclusion of Windows Defender, the company’s own real time antivirus and malware solution.Must Read:Why is my iPad so slow?
Defender itself isn’t new, it’s been around since Windows XP, where it was an optional free anti-spyware program. It shipped with Windows 7 and Vista but with Windows 8, it was finally made into a full antivirus solution. On its own, it has been reviewed poorly and compares unfavourably to third party solutions out there but it does have the backing of the Redmond giant and under the new “Software and services” slogan that the company now employs, it’s only a matter of time before it gets good enough.Jihosoft iPhone Backup Extractor Extract and recover all types of data from iPhone backup files, such as camera roll photos, videos, SMS, contacts, reminders, WhatsApp, and etc.
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Think about it. The first thing you do when you buy a new desktop is look for an antivirus solution. The more tech savvy among us will then look for a third-party malware solution. By offering both built into the Windows 10 OS, Microsoft is looking for a huge slice of the pie from the casual market. Most people don’t want to go through the hassles of buying multiple products, by offering a solution with basic security functionality already onboard, the company is looking to make inroads into that market.

Fall Creators Update to bolster Windows Defender Advanced Threat Protection (ATP) for enterprises with heavy-duty exploit security tools and Azure machine learning analysis.
Fall Creators Update to bolster Windows Defender Advanced Threat Protection (ATP) for enterprises with heavy-duty exploit security tools and Azure machine learning analysis.

What is surprising is that it seems to be getting a little help from the competition too, specifically browser developers who have had a strained relationship with antivirus companies. In January of this year, Former Firefox developer Robert O’ Callahan essentially told users to disable and uninstall antivirus software from their systems in a blog post. “AV products poison the software ecosystem because their invasive and poorly-implemented code makes it difficult for browser vendors and other developers to improve their own security,” he says. “Users have been fooled into associating AV vendors with security and you don't want AV vendors bad-mouthing your product. AV software is broadly installed and when it breaks your product, you need the cooperation of AV vendors to fix it. (You can't tell users to turn off AV software because if anything bad were to happen that the AV software might have prevented, you'll catch the blame). When your product crashes on startup due to AV interference, users blame your product, not AV. Worse still, if they make your product incredibly slow and bloated, users just think that's how your product is.”
In response to a conversation on twitter regarding the blog post, Google’s Justin Schuh, part of the Chrome team tweeted:
Browser makers don't complain about Microsoft Defender because we have tons of empirical data showing that it's the only well behaved AV. https://t.co/ClGwEWCoWu
— Justin Schuh ðŸ˜ˆ (@justinschuh) January 31, 2017
Interestingly, Kaspersky just announced a free version of its AV product called “Kaspersky Free” which will offer a selection of features from its paid suite in exchange of using anonymous data from your PC to improve its machine learning algorithms across products. It was also hit with allegations that it was in cohorts with Russian Intelligence, earlier this month.
Whatever the case maybe here, between Microsoft aggressively vying for space in their domain and browser makers calling out antivirus companies on their less than elegant solutions, the pickings are going to be slim for the major antivirus companies unless they find a better way to compete.

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