http://www.pcworld.com/article/172821/microsofts_new_free_antivirus_hits
_the_streets.html

Erik Larkin

Sep 29, 2009 3:03 pm

Microsoft today lifted the curtain on its Microsoft Security Essentials,
the free successor to its OneCare security program.

MSE uses the same antivirus engine as the phased-out OneCare, but the
new free program focuses only on malware blocking. It doesn't include a
firewall, system optimizer or other security suite-type features.

When I reviewed a beta version of Security Essentials back in July
alongside other free antivirus programs, MSE did a good, but not
top-notch job at detecting Trojans, keyloggers and other malware, with a
97.8 percent overall block rate as tested by AVTest.org. It did shine in
proactive tests that simulate how well an antivirus program can detect
new malware that doesn't yet have a signature, and its performance there
was topped only by Avira's AntiVir Personal.

The strong proactive performance may be thanks to its Dynamic Signature
Service feature that checks new, potentially suspicious files against
the latest available data on Microsoft servers . But its pokey scan
speed held it back in our free AV software rankings - it was the slowest
scanner we tested. For a full list of the MSE beta's performance
results, see its lab test report.

Today's MSE, now available for download, doesn't add any new features or
look any different from the beta version I reviewed, according to a
Microsoft spokesman. The final version only includes some "code quality
improvements, bug fixes, etc." when compared with that beta.

That beta looked good and was easy to use. If Microsoft has managed to
ramp up Security Essential's scan speed, and ideally bump up its
detection rate just a tad, since I checked out the beta, then it will
likely be a good choice for budget-conscious protection. Tech-savvy
users willing to put up with an at-times annoying interface, as well as
a daily pop-up ad, might prefer the stronger malware detection rate in
Avira AntiVir Personal, which took top billing in the free AV ratings.

If you do decide to use MSE, be sure you enable the built-in Windows
firewall or use a third-party alternative. You might want to pair
Security Essentials (or any other free AV app) with the also-free PC
Tools Threatfire, which adds an effective additional layer of behavioral
detection that can catch new, unknown malware.
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