Posted 11 August 2008 - 12:39 PM
We ignore the issue of security, and pass it off to Windows users, at our peril.
This review, and many of the comments, should serve as an open invitation to hackers. Mac users won't even use half-baked freebie AV software! They'll sneer and say "We've got no viruses." That means hackers, when they do target our Macs, will succeed wildly. We leave our doors and windows open, and wait for the coming storm.
"NAV took more than three and a half hours to complete the initial scan of my 170GB of data." This is not a comparative evaluation. It's a number. How much time did subsequent scans take? Did Norton switch to a smart scan and bypass files it had scanned recently? We don't know. The author gives no space or ink to testing methodology.
Try harder: "NAV was installed on a two-year-old Mac Pro, a new MacBook, a new iMac, and a one-year-old MacBook Pro after each system was infected with 17 known variants of viruses and trojans currently in the wild. (So that the AV software has to deal with concurrent infections, since a compromised system is likely to be reinfected again and again. And we caught viruses in the wild, not just known test viruses.) Norton successfully removed... Norton did not successfully remove..." This is a comparative evaluation which would give some idea as to Norton's true effectiveness.
I would expect such testing to be applied to ClamXav and Intego Virus Barrier, as well.
Someone wrote that today's software won't pick up tomorrow's virus. This is also true. Where is the demand for heuristic detection, now common in the better Windows apps. There are AV packages that can catch new viruses BEFORE signatures are released, based solely on patterns of behavior.
If any Mac AV software is capable of this, I have yet to see it mentioned in any reviews.
Where are the industry comparatives, such as VB 100? And when will they be Mac-specific? Linux-specific rankings exist now, and the Mac OS has a broader user base than Linux, last I checked.
I am security conscious. I keep antivirus and firewall on at all times, even when behind a good hardware router. I use strong passwords, in spite of their dubious effectiveness.
When a successful drive-by infection attacks the Mac community, as will surely happen one day, Mac users will scream for better information.
So far, hackers trying to steal financial information have gone for low-hanging fruit, i.e. Windows, but that is bound to change. The above review reads like a press release from Symantec. I'm waiting for the day when Mac publications and Mac users take this subject seriously.