Linked by Adam S on Tue 26th Aug 2008 12:17 UTC, submitted by irbis
Bugs & Viruses "Antivirus software on your personal computer could become a thing of the past thanks to a new "cloud computing" approach to malicious software detection developed at the University of Michigan. The researchers' new approach, called CloudAV, moves antivirus functionality into the "network cloud" and off personal computers. CloudAV analyzes suspicious files using multiple antivirus and behavioral detection programs simultaneously. Traditional antivirus software that resides on a personal computer checks documents and programs as they are accessed. Because of performance constraints and program incompatibilities, only one antivirus detector is typically used at a time. The researchers see promising opportunities in applying CloudAV to cell phones and other mobile devices that aren't robust enough to carry powerful antivirus software."
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Bandwidth
by mallard on Tue 26th Aug 2008 13:58 UTC
mallard
Member since:
2006-01-06

So, in order to check my files, they have to be uploaded to some server on the web?

So, it's not very realistic to scan my music and video libraries or my games or anything above about 100kb then...

Not to mention the privacy implications...

RE: Bandwidth
by irbis on Tue 26th Aug 2008 16:32 in reply to "Bandwidth"
irbis Member since:
2005-07-08

So, in order to check my files, they have to be uploaded to some server on the web? So, it's not very realistic to scan my music and video libraries

Huh? Did you even glimpse the actual article? It doesn't talk about uploading and then scanning your offline music collection or anything like that (why would you need to check your offline music or videos for viruses is beyond my understanding anyway).

The article quite explicitly states that the technology is about checking incoming files when they are transmitted, say, to "cell phones and other mobile devices that aren't robust enough to carry powerful antivirus software". In such situations a solution like this could make sense. And also many ISPs already offer online antivirus services to their customers which is also not very far from this.

Also, among other things: "CloudAV also caches analysis results, speeding up the process compared with traditional antivirus software. This could be useful for workplaces, for example, where multiple employees might access the same document. The new approach also includes what the developers call "retrospective detection," which scans its file access history when a new threat is identified. This allows it to catch previously-missed infections earlier."

Not to mention the privacy implications...

That privacy worry might be true to some extent.

But actually - in my opinion, and if I may add - we shouldn't really need to use any antivirus software at all in normal network tasks. Normally a good firewall (and common sense) should be quite enough. In my opinion, the need for antivirus software exists mostly just because of poor basic security (and other design) in software and operating systems. It would be better to develop and use more secure software and operating systems from the start.

Edited 2008-08-26 16:39 UTC

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