InfoWorld
By Paul Roberts, IDG News Service: August 25, 2003
Antivirus companies target spyware, worms
Leading antivirus software makers Symantec and Network
Associates Inc. (NAI) announced updates to their products
on Monday, touting protection against "spyware"
and Internet worms to entice customers.
Symantec, of Cupertino, California, unveiled a new version
of its flagship product, Norton AntiVirus 2004. The
new version of Norton AntiVirus can detect a range of
snooping programs that are not technically viruses,
but still pose a threat to Internet users' privacy,
Symantec said.
NAI announced a new version of its antivirus software,
McAfee VirusScan, continuing the race between the antivirus
software vendors. The latest version of McAfee VirusScan
also spots spyware and adware, allowing users to detect
and remove the suspect software applications from systems
running VirusScan.
Spyware and adware programs silently monitor a user's
activity on the Internet, keeping track of information
such as the Web sites a user visits.
Norton AntiVirus 2004 will scan e-mail and instant
message attachments, flagging known spyware programs
before they are installed. The program will also spot
spyware and adware programs that have already been installed
and report those to the user, according to Symantec.
Norton AntiVirus also flags legal adware (advertising
software) programs such as the popular Gator software
from The Gator Corp. of Redwood City, California, according
to Kelly Martin, senior product manager for Norton Antivirus
2004.
A popular example of adware (or advertising software),
Gator performs useful tasks for users such as remembering
and filling in user names, passwords and other data
for online forms. However, the program also tracks user
behavior and buying habits for the company's customers
and delivers targeted "pop-up" advertisements
to desktops.
Norton AntiVirus will not automatically remove adware
like Gator, which is often governed by a licensing agreement
that the user acknowledged when the program was installed,
Martin said.
The focus on spyware comes after research on end users
identified the stealth programs as a leading concern
among Norton AntiVirus users, even when users didn't
know they had the programs installed, she said.
"Even if users were not able to articulate 'I
have spyware,' they were telling us about dialling programs
that were calling out to a third party or having their
(Web browser) hijacked or the home page rerouted to
another site," Martin said.
"This was a big ticket issue for our user base,"
she said.
Following two weeks of high-profile worm outbreaks,
Sunnyvale, California-based NAI is calling attention
to a new WormStopper feature. That feature enables VirusScan
to spot worm-like activity such as a high volume of
e-mail and repetitive e-mail content, NAI said.
While the new feature won't stop infections, per se,
it will slow the spread of mass-mailing worms like the
recent Blaster and Sobig.F worms, NAI said.
One security expert said that features to spot spyware
are long overdue in mainstream antivirus programs.
"It's about time," said Richard Smith, an
independent security analyst based in Boston.
Installations of the shadowy programs have escalated
in recent years, with the growing popularity of peer-to-peer
file sharing programs such as Kazaa and Morpheus, Smith
said. Those programs often bundle adware programs with
the main file-sharing software, he said.
Symantec, NAI and other companies that are serious
about stopping spyware might benefit from snatching
up niche spyware detection companies such as Enigma
Software Group Inc., maker of SpyHunter.
Such companies already have large databases of spyware,
adware and other programs that could jump start the
detection capabilities of more mainstream antivirus
products, he said.
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