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Internet Security Suites Face Off.
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Author: Landesman, MaryMainelli, Tom
Section: NEW PRODUCTS
SECURITY
| Internet Security Suites Face Off |
These products promise to protect you from more than just viruses. We see how they stack up.
THE PERILS OF PC use
have changed significantly since the term computer virus was coined in
1983. Today's threats range beyond simple viruses to Internet-born
worms, Trojan horses, and spyware.
I tested three of the
latest Internet security suites--from McAfee, Symantec, and Trend
Micro--to see whether their latest enhancements offer the necessary
level of protection against today's threats.
TRENDSETTER
TREND MICRO'S $50
PC-Cillin Internet Security 2005 continues to impress, building on the
solid antivirus, firewall, and spam protection of its predecessor
(which earned a PC World Best Buy award in June 2004). The 2005 edition
offers a slew of new features, including Wi-Fi intrusion detection,
protection for multiple PCs on a home network, vulnerability assessment
that lets you know whether your system lacks an important security
patch, and an anti-phishing component.
The suite's
port-based firewall automatically blocks unsolicited inbound attempts,
and detects and blocks both inbound and outbound malicious traffic. The
firewall stealthed (rendered invisible] all of our computer ports,
ensuring that we were virtually undetectable on the Internet.
Unlike viruses,
spyware often installs itself directly via the Windows Registry;
ferreting out its offending keys and values requires a content scan of
the Registry. All three of the suites claim to fight spyware, but in
our tests only Trend Micro's suite spotted spyware infections in the
Registry.
SYMANTEC STEPS U
SYMANTEC HAS IMPROVED
its $70 Norton Internet Security 2005 with better overall performance,
and a faster scan speed in particular, The suite pumps up protection
against Internet threats--blocking inbound traffic on ports associated
with certain worms--and also allows you to specify a list of trusted
sites to better manage privacy controls.
Like the other
firewalls in the suites we tested, Norton's successfully stealthed our
PC ports. The suite adds permission-based features to its firewall, as
does the McAfee suite. However, both products also automatically assign
"allow" permissions to every already running Windows service--including
Windows Messenger, which some companies exploit as a way to serve
annoying pop-up advertising directly to the user's desktop.
Norton tosses in
additional spam filters, including one for Yahoo Web-based e-mail. But
the program lacks some features that you'll find in Trend Micro's
package, and the spyware detection is not as good as what's available
from Trend Micro. In our tests, Norton failed to detect any of the
active infections introduced into the Registry, though it did correctly
pinpoint the files we used to infect the system.
MCAFEE'S WEB FEEL
MCAFEE'S $70 Internet
Security Suite 2005 boasts a completely redone interface that, though
attractive, is somewhat harder to navigate than those of the other
products in our comparison. When accessing various menu items through
the program interface, I was directed to McAfee.com, which delivered
pop-up ads. I activated the pop-up blocker option in the suite, only to
be warned that the feature might inhibit normal Web site functioning.
McAfee offers a wide
array of custom spam filters, including ones that let you filter by
language, block intentional misspellings, and adopt many other editable
rules. The filters also home in on invisible text and
images--techniques that spammers commonly use to thwart content filters.
Like Symantec's
offering, the McAfee suite failed to detect the spyware entries in our
test system's Registry. But unlike Norton IS 2005, the McAfee product
also overlooked files we used to infect the system.
SP2 SECURITY CENTER
OF THE THREE suites
we tested, only PC-cillin Internet Security 2005 worked seamlessly with
the Security Center in Microsoft's Windows XP Service Pack 2. The new
Security Center tracks antivirus software and warns the user if it is
not installed or is outdated.
We tested ail three
suites on a system running XP Service Pack 2, and only when the
PC-cillin suite was installed did the Windows Security Center correctly
reflect the fact that the product needed updating. With Norton Internet
Security 2005 and McAfee Internet Security Suite 2005 installed, the
Windows Security Center erroneously reported that the products were
up-to-date. (For more about erroneous reporting, see our online report
at find.pcworld.com /46292.)
TREND ON TO
ALL THREE SUITES we
tested showed improvements over last year's packages. Full antivirus
testing is beyond the scope of this review (watch for such tests in a
future issue), but our hands-on evaluation points to Trend Micro's
PC-cillin Internet Security 2005 as the clear winner here. In addition
to a full arsenal of easy-to-use tools, the company's latest package
sells for a tower price than the competition (though many retailers
offer all three suites for less than their list prices), and it comes
with free, toll-free phone tech support. In a world of rapidly evolving
threats, it's reassuring to have a product like this on your side.
 SYMANTEC'S NORTON INTERNET SECURITY 2005 otters taster scan speeds and better overall performance than earlier versions.
 TREND MICRO'S PC-CILLIN INTERNET Security 2005 offers numerous customizable settings and flexible installation options.
 MCAFEE'S INTERNET SECURITY SUITE 2005 has the feel of a Web portal, frequently sending you to the company's Web site.
2005
McAfee
3 stars
Delivers the basic antivirus and security
tools you need, but lacks some tools; the Web portal interlace is
annoying. List: S70 download, $80 boxed find.pcworld.com/45918
2005
Symantec
3.5 stars
Better overall performance than in the past
and some useful new tools, but it still omits a few important features.
List: $70 download or boxed find.pcworld.com/45914
2005
Trend Micro
4.5 stars
Solid protection, many useful security
features, excellent Registry scanning, a low price, and free technical
support. List: $50 download or boxed find.pcworld.com/45916
~~~~~~~~ By Mary Landesman
EDITED BY Tom Mainelli
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