Linked by Amjith Ramanujam on Wed 19th Nov 2008 02:13 UTC, submitted by poundsmack
Microsoft To address the growing need for a PC security solution tailored to the demands of emerging markets, smaller PC form factors and rapid increases in the incidence of malware, Microsoft Corp. plans to offer a new consumer security offering focused on core anti-malware protection.
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RE: Comment by flanque
by Liquidator on Wed 19th Nov 2008 07:43 UTC in reply to "Comment by flanque"
Liquidator
Member since:
2007-03-04

Yes, it's a good move. Other companies are already offering free AV, so there's no unfair competition here. Those who want a paid AV can disable the native AV and use their own just fine. I hope this new MS AV updates automatically and daily for both legtimate and pirated copies of Windows because otherwise this isn't going to put a dent into botnet's installations. Remember that between 85 and 90% of spam is sent from a network of remotely controlled computers infected by malware around the world. It should take a few more years until everybody uses an updated antivirus.

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RE[2]: Comment by flanque
by pepa on Thu 20th Nov 2008 17:05 in reply to "RE: Comment by flanque"
pepa Member since:
2005-07-08

Do you have some pointers about those figures for the origins of spam? I find it strange, because spam still needs to be sent through the SMTP servers of the ISP of an 'owned' computer.

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RE[3]: Comment by flanque
by Arawn on Fri 21st Nov 2008 10:04 in reply to "RE[2]: Comment by flanque"
Arawn Member since:
2005-07-13

Sorry to say, but no it doesn't. Those 'owned' computers can have a simple SMTP engine installed, and as long the ISP doesn't block sending to TCP port 25, they send spam directly.

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