Thursday 17 May 2012

The Best Antivirus for 2012



New model-year security products used to come out in the fall, like new model-year cars. In 2011, though, the first 2012 antivirus (G Data AntiVirus 2012 ($29.95 direct, 3.5 stars) turned up way back in May. It's almost May 2012, so it's time to declare the model year ended and get ready for the 2013 models.

Testing the Tools

To evaluate antivirus utilities, always rely on hands-on, real-world testing. The malware removal test involves installing each product on a dozen malware-infested virtual machines and challenging it to clean them up. For the malware blocking test,  try to install the same collection of threats on a clean system protected by the product being tested. 

Also refer to reports from major independent antivirus testing labs. The labs have vastly more resources and they can perform large-scale tests that would take more time. The chart below summarizes our test results as well results from the independent labs.

 Antivirus Comparison Chart


Webroot Secure Anywhere Antivirus

 OS Compatibility
  
Windows Vista, Windows XP, Windows 7

 Type
Business, Personal, Professional


 Malware Removal
 4.5

 Malware Blocking
 5.0  

 Independent Lab Results
 Fair

Norton AntiVirus 2012

 OS Compatibility
  
Windows Vista, Windows XP, Windows 7

 Type  
Business, Personal, Professional

 Malware Removal
 4.5

 Malware Blocking
 4.5 
 
 Independent Lab Results
 Good

Bitdefender Antivirus Plus 2012

OS Compatibility
   
Windows Vista, Windows XP, Windows 7

 Type
Business, Personal, Professional

 Malware Removal
 3.5

 Malware Blocking
   3.0

 Independent Lab Results
Excellent

Kaspersky Anti-Virus 2012

 OS Compatibility
  
Windows Vista, Windows XP, Windows 7

 Type
    Personal

 Malware Removal
 3.0

 Malware Blocking   
 3.5

 Independent Lab Results
 Good


Cleanup-Only Tools

Four of these recent products are specifically designed to clean up malware infestations, with no real-time protection component. Malwarebytes' Anti-Malware Free 1.51 (Free, 4 stars) was the most effective of these. Its detection rate wasn't high, but effective removal gave it 6.4 points overall. The commercial Malwarebytes' Anti-Malware PRO 1.51 ($24.95 direct, 3 stars) does add real-time protection, but it was the least effective of the entire group.



Norman Malware Cleaner 2.1 (Free, 3.5 stars) wasn't as effective as Malwarebytes. Its rootkit removal score is especially low because most of the rootkits it detected were still running after its alleged removal.




Comodo Cleaning Essentials (free, 4.5 stars) is full portable, so malware can't evade it by interfering with installation. It was particularly effective against rootkits.




While not free like the others, avast! Rescue Disc ($10/once direct, 3.5 stars) is inexpensive. Rootkits and other malware types that subvert Windows itself should yield to this bootable tool. However, in testing one rootkit remained running even after alleged removal.

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