Thursday, October 18, 2007

ThreatFire™ AntiVirus protects when others can't

PCs are under constant attack from viruses, spyware and identity theft. Every day you hear about a new threat to your PC. They're coming faster than ever before, they're getting harder to stop and traditional antivirus products are not able to keep up.

Source: http://www.threatfire.com/

Will your antivirus software catch the latest malware that just came out today? In most cases, no, because it simply does not know how to detect it yet. But ThreatFire's ActiveDefense technology does, and has proven to provide up to 243% more protection when combined with traditional AntiVirus products.

If I already have antivirus software why do I need ThreatFire?

ThreatFire is dramatically different to traditional antivirus software. Normal antivirus products usually need to have first identified and seen a threat before they can provide adequate protection against it. The protection is then provided via a signature or fingerprint update, which must first be written by an antivirus researcher. This creates a large window of time where threats are undetected and can therefore infect your PC even when you have antivirus software installed.

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Thursday, October 04, 2007

The Firefox conspiracy: It’s FUD time again!

A recent article, raised the question on whether, Firefox 2 new anti-phishing feature may pose a privacy threat. - Mozilla Links, October 27, 2006.

Source: Mozilla Links / Percy Cabello

A user just learned that Firefox 2 has an enhanced anti-phishing protection mode that checks every visited web address on a live database of known or suspect phishing web sites maintained for Google. So Google knows what web addresses are being visited. If you are logged on some Google service, it’s probable it also knows what web addresses you visit.

By default this mode is turned off. Instead, Firefox downloads a list of newly reported phishing sites twice an hour, web addresses are checked against it and Google knows nothing.

The user, iritant, thinks this is news, so he posts it to Slashdot. Slashdot agrees and approves it. The Inquirer thinks it’s a slow week for Firefox/Mozilla news and this is the best it will get so Nick Farrel posts an article about it: “Google is getting shedloads of information on the sorts of sites you are visiting”, reads the center paragraph.

Now we can wait and see it making the usual round on blogs and tech news and social bookmarking sites.

For clarifications purposes ...

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