When you pressed it, it went BEEP and dumped you in the monitor. The earliest model of the Apple ][ had a normal RESET key in the upper right corner of the keyboard, with only a slightly stiffer spring than every other key on the keyboard. Norton detected every instance of known "widespread" malware in every monthly evaluation conducted by German lab AV-Test (opens in new tab) from January 2017 through December 2020. Its otherwise perfect winning streak against previously unseen "zero-day" malware was marred by a single miss in April 2020, when it got a 99.5% detection rate.This is the SECOND time it came full circle.Īpple should have learned their lesson with the original Apple ][ RESET key. (Norton's false-positive rate has been going down.) Only Kaspersky matched those numbers (and broke its winning streak in the same month), although Kaspersky's malware engine was arguably better "tuned" as it picked up only eight false-positive detections over that three-year period compared with Norton's 35. The two brands jockeyed for the lead in evaluations run by Austrian lab AV-Comparatives (opens in new tab) in 2020. Norton detected an average of 100% of malware from February through May 2020, ahead of Kaspersky's 99.9%. The tables were turned in the July-October 2020 tests, in which Kaspersky averaged 99.7% detection to Norton's 99.5%īut Norton got a total of 72 false positives over the course of 2020, while Kaspersky had just two. Latest test results as of January 2021 Malware detection rates The latter's malware-detection engine may be better tuned. In the October-December 2020 sets of tests run by London-based SE Labs (opens in new tab), both Norton and Kaspersky detected every piece of malware. Yet Norton neutralized one piece of malware after installation without blocking it outright, and also misclassified 6% of benign websites and pieces of software as possibly malicious. Kaspersky and McAfee were perfect at both. ![]() Norton stumbled a bit in the labs' July-September 2020 tests, however, letting through one piece of malware to compromise the test system. Norton 360: Security and privacy featuresĪll Norton products, starting with Norton AntiVirus Plus, include a two-way firewall, an unlimited password manager and a file-backup program. They also include the company's Safe Web browser extensions, which work with Internet Explorer, Edge, Chrome and Firefox. Safe Web's Isolation Mode renders the contents of known dangerous sites as read-only. If you connect to a banking site, Norton runs the browser session in a virtual machine. Norton's Secure VPN comes with Norton 360 Standard and above. Unlike other antivirus companies, Norton doesn't tease you with a free limited-data offering and then make you pay for more - you get unlimited VPN data from the get-go. You can hide your location like a digital James Bond, or just stream localized movies and sports as if you were in London or Mexico City. It took us an average of 6.5 seconds to connect to Norton's VPN, but the VPN's encryption and routing cut our usable bandwidth by half. Need even more help? The company's Ultimate Help Desk service provides expedited access to technicians, four tune-up sessions a year and service reports for all your computer-related issues, not just those related to Norton products. Subscriptions to the Ultimate Help Desk service cost $150 per year (for one PC or Mac), or $20 a month (for up to three systems). There's also a one-time service providing similar advice and information for $70 if you're technically flummoxed and have deep pockets. ![]() With one of the most complete (and crowded) lineups of personal digital-security and privacy products, NortonLifeLock can protect a single computer or an entire household's devices.īetween the unlimited VPN, the password manager, the parental controls, backup software, online storage and the comprehensive identity-protection services, Norton offers pretty much everything you could ever need - but it can quickly get expensive as you add more options. If you'd rather mix and match these various services, or you don't need them all, Kaspersky Total Security has excellent malware protection, a password manager, backup software and parental controls plus items Norton lacks, such as a hardened browser, file encryption and file shredding.īitdefender Premium Security swaps out the backup software for unlimited VPN service, but its malware protection is a half-step down from Norton's. McAfee Total Protection + VPN offers identity protection as well as unlimited VPN, but has an even lower caliber of malware protection. In other words, no software company covers all aspects of modern-day security as completely as NortonLifeLock.
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