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Vista: Security industry ready for retail launch
Is latest Windows safe as houses?

By Joris Evers

Published: Thursday 18 January 2007

All major security software makers, as well as many smaller ones, will have products available for Vista when the operating system is launched to consumers on 30 January, Microsoft said. That's a different story from last November, when Vista was released for businesses. At that time, only one major security company, McAfee, was ready.

Ben Fathi, corporate vice president of the security technology unit at Microsoft, said in a statement: "Windows Vista is the most secure operating system we've ever built. Our security partners continue to play a vital role in adding layers of protection onto the Microsoft Windows platform."

Microsoft is increasingly encroaching on the terrain of traditional security companies such as McAfee, Symantec and Trend Micro. Included in Vista are two of the three protection technologies that security experts typically recommend for any Windows PC: a firewall and a spyware shield. The new operating system lacks the third: virus protection but Microsoft now sells that as Windows Live OneCare.

In what could be good news for the security companies, some reviewers aren't enthusiastic about Windows Firewall, the Windows Defender spyware tool or Windows Live OneCare. The Microsoft software offers mostly basic protection and is not the best of its class, such critics have said.

Aside from the basic protection features, Microsoft has fitted Vista with several more features to thwart cyber attacks. For example, Internet Explorer 7 runs in a protected mode to prevent installation of malicious software through security holes. Also, User Account Control runs a Vista PC with fewer user privileges, in an effort to keep malicious code from doing as much damage as it would on a machine running in administrator mode - a typical setting on Windows XP.

In addition, Vista includes parental controls, and IE 7 has a filter to block phishing scams.

Natalie Lambert, an analyst at Forrester Research, said: "There is no doubt that Vista will be Microsoft's most secure operating system. However, most secure is not equivalent to secure. Users need to protect themselves."

McAfee, Symantec, Trend Micro and numerous others will have antivirus software and other protection tools available when Vista hits the market later this month. Microsoft, which has been pushing into the security market since last May, will also have a version of Windows Live OneCare ready for Vista buyers, the company said.

To distinguish itself from the pack, Symantec this week announced a new feature for Norton Internet Security and Norton AntiVirus. The products, for Vista and Windows XP, will include a new detection mechanism called "Sonar" that looks at the behaviour of code on a PC to determine whether it's malicious, rather than using the traditional signatures - a kind of "fingerprint" of known bad code.

Joris Evers writes for CNET News.com


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