Alternative Enterprise Anti-Virus Solutions? 148
Darth_brooks asks: "I admin for a great non-profit organization that has spent the last year rebuilding after a massive fire. We've got a pretty tight system running now, especially compared to the unmanaged chaos that existed before the fire. Firefox for surfing and T-bird for for e-mail, WSUS for updates, and we're slowly replacing Office with OpenOffice. But out anti-virus solution (command AV, a holdover from our old system) is not cutting the mustard. Specifically the management console isn't exactly reliable, and we just don't feel like we're getting our money's worth. What alternatives can the Slashdot crowd suggest?"
"The two obvious names that come to mind are Norton and Mcafee. Since all of our machines are donated, we really don't have the resources for Norton (who does?) and Mcafee's just been dealt a black eye. In addition, we're on a limited budget. Our machines are mostly P2 & P3's, and we're an XP / Active Directory shop with some scattered Fedora & BSD boxes scattered about for non-desktop tasks.
The biggest features we're looking for are the ability to centrally manage updates (which rules of AVG's free edition), and a reasonable price tag for licenses for 50-60 machines. Our current solution is only in place because we signed a long term licensing agreement, and I don't want to see us get into another deal for a product that doesn't turn out to be as god as advertised. I'd also like to hear some of the Horror / Success stories from users."
NOD32 (Score:5, Informative)
Re:NOD32 (Score:3, Informative)
Re:NOD32 (Score:3, Interesting)
It's low impact on system resources, extremely effective, and they update frequently. It catches stuff Norton/McAfee don't bother with - things not quite 'viruses' but not exactly good for you either (such as intrusive activex controls and the like).
Considering you're a non-profit, check out... (Score:4, Informative)
Good luck!
Re:Considering you're a non-profit, check out... (Score:1)
http://www.techsoup.org/stock/category.asp?catalog _name [techsoup.org]
Virus free for over a decade... (Score:2)
But I will second the reccomendation for Tech Soup, they have NAV enterprise edition with bulk licenses and all that server based virus administration goodness that Windsows people seem to need. Plus there are a bunch of other non-profit items you can get (MS Licensing is dirt cheap).
Big tip though - read the fine print on 'donatioon' limitations and plan your orders accordingly. Some of them limit to which types of NPs they will 'donate' to (Macromedia), some tie in an
Re:Considering you're a non-profit, check out... (Score:1)
Re:Considering you're a non-profit, check out... (Score:2)
Clam AV (Score:5, Informative)
It comes in both *nix [clamav.net] and Windows [sosdg.org] varients and works pretty well for system scanning. It also works very well in a mail server tool-chain.
MTW
Re:Clam AV (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Clam AV (Score:2)
Now-a-days I don't think you will find an all inclusive anti-virus solution, all of them one way or another has flaws and will allow an infection to take place
Re:Clam AV (Score:2)
Perhaps you need to tell the maintainers that the need to update their front page:
http://www.clamwin.com/ [clamwin.com]Re:Clam AV (Score:2)
Re:Clam AV (Score:2)
I don't assume all people run winblows, just people who need virus scanners, never needed one under any other OS, tripwire was more than adequate.
Just get AVG and be done with it (Score:5, Informative)
AVG takes the approach of just working behind the scenes and doing it well...Norton takes the approach of "I need to constantly justify my existance by letting the user know I am doing...something"
AVG works great, so go with it. Their support is pretty good too from the couple of times when I needed to contact them.
It sounds like you pretty much said AVG is good and reasonable so just go with it.
Re:Just get AVG and be done with it (Score:3, Insightful)
AVG does the job well, doesn't completely take over any machine it's installed on causing massive performance problems, is dead simple to deploy & administer, and was the best value for money of all the various AV solutions we looked at.
Re:Just get AVG and be done with it (Score:2)
What's your opinion? Are these valid complaints?
I use AVG free on my home systems, and recommend it to many friends-- performance does seem much worse when AVG is running (this is my non-objective opinion). I've never seriously evaluated it for the business (I'm not the Windows admin).
Re:Just get AVG and be done with it (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Just get AVG and be done with it (Score:2)
Re:Just get AVG and be done with it (Score:3, Informative)
My laptop is a P-III 600MHz / 512Meg RAM running WinXP Pro and frankly, AVG doesn't seem to have any impact on performance at all. If I do nothing, Task Manager reports 0% usage, so I don't think that AVG gets much in the way.
What AVG does do is a dayly check and if you're working while it does that, you might "feel" it. Normally it's at 8am for me, but I don't know if its a rule (or if I configured it that way) At 8am, I'm so sleepy that I usuall
Re:Just get AVG and be done with it (Score:2)
Re:Just get AVG and be done with it (Score:2)
i use mcafee enterprise and it's a great program and much less intrusive than norton in my opinion. the home editions of mcafee and norton are just pieces of crap though. if i was given the choice between those or AVG free, AVG free wins.
i've see norton miss many viruses as well, even with updated def's.
Re:Just get AVG and be done with it (Score:2)
Re:Just get AVG and be done with it (Score:2)
Re:Just get AVG and be done with it (Score:2)
Re:Just get AVG and be done with it (Score:4, Informative)
Ad-Aware's free edition is called Ad-Aware Personal and updates have never stopped being free. In fact, I just tried it myself, just to make sure. Go here [lavasoftusa.com] and see for yourself.
Re:Just get AVG and be done with it (Score:2)
Well, maybe they started providing updates again, but they definitely stopped and for well over a year. I got into an argument with someone over this, which is why I have any personal investment in it - I was wrong when I claimed they still gave updates. While the update function still functions, at least last time I checked, it only would update you to an old detection file - over a year ago, it was months old already.
If they are giving updates for the personal version that are actually up to date, thi
Re:Just get AVG and be done with it (Score:2)
In any case, what bothered me was not the innacuracy of your comment, but the fact that you were trying to discredit the poster for no good reason. I don't even like Ad-Aware that much!
Re:Just get AVG and be done with it (Score:2)
Re:Just get AVG and be done with it (Score:2)
Re:Just get AVG and be done with it (Score:2)
Aye, we use Symantec's corporate A/V (same thing) and have been pretty happy with it. The corporate product does a good job of staying out of the way, staying up-to-date and doing its job.
The downside is the cost per seat for licensing. For a business, it's fairly easy to justify the cost (since cleaning up an infection pays for the license fees just in labor and lost time), but I can see annual license fees as being a problem for a non-profit.
Re:Just get AVG and be done with it (Score:2)
I do a lot of virus removal for "average Joe" PCs, too. I've seen viruses slip right by Norton, myself.
In fact, I've seen viruses slip by ALL of the AV products I've seen. AVG has the better track record for us, though, by far. Lately, it's been much improved over older versions, as well.
Even if they were all equal, though, I couldn't recommend another product due to their crippling bugs. It's not uncommon to see one of our customers suspect a virus only to find that it wa
Re:Just get AVG and be done with it (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Just get AVG and be done with it (Score:2)
Every time I get a new DAT, I have it scan all IMAP mail folders in case the new virus already infected a message and to date, I haven't had it find any this way in almost a year. IOW, it finds the active viruses well before they hit my networks.
Re:Just get AVG and be done with it (Score:2)
Re:Just get AVG and be done with it (Score:2)
One month free trial (Score:2)
ClamAV/ClamWin (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:ClamAV/ClamWin (Score:1, Informative)
Re:ClamAV/ClamWin (Score:2)
F-Prot (Score:4, Informative)
I just checked, and a 60 seat corporate license with full updates would run you $240 a year.
Re:F-Prot (Score:3, Interesting)
And they've never once given me any reason to believe they're in anyone's pocket or have any hidden agendas. Just a good reliable AV solution at a minimal price.
pay for avg (Score:4, Informative)
actually, wouldn't the license agreement rule out AVG FREE edition in your situation?
however, they do have a fairly decent commercial product for the price. look at their network edition http://www.grisoft.com/doc/Networks/lng/us/tpl/tp
Re:pay for avg (Score:1)
I don't want to bore you with my personal experience, AVG can really detect virus/adware that Norton ignored, and these are not false-negative detection.
Uh, use open source? (Score:2)
Do you have any specific requirements that would not allow this to work?
Re:Uh, use open source? (Score:1)
Re:Uh, use open source? (Score:1)
Yeah! Really! This solution is so... obvious. Anybody with half a brain would see that this is the clear choice!
(Here's a hint--- drop your pompous additude and people might take you seriously more often)
Re:Uh, use open source? (Score:2)
Nonprofits can get very sweet deals on discounted software (WinXP for $50 a seat, etc). This organization should seek out a low cost commericial solution-- and save time AND money, rather then waste time on intellectual masturbation.
I'd call AVG... (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:I'd call AVG... (Score:5, Informative)
AVG Admin will save you time. If you use Windows Desktop Protection in the Shared Computer Toolkit, Grisoft will even send you the script for auto-updates when Windows Updates from your WSUS run.
AVG Free edition is ruled out by the licensing which doesn't cover non-home users pretty much. Even libraries are excluded from using it legally.
AVG (Score:2, Informative)
Sophos AV (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Sophos AV (Score:2)
I supsect you were running an old version, son.
Don't get TrendMicro OfficeScan (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Don't get TrendMicro OfficeScan (Score:4, Interesting)
I use Officescan; backdoor was patched 3rys ago (Score:2)
The windows boxes I administer are protected by an old version of Officescan (from three or so years ago, with renewed support, of course). Disabling the protection isn't really an issue with me as long as it's hard to do unless you know what you're doing (in which case you should be
Re:I use Officescan; backdoor was patched 3rys ago (Score:2)
That's exactly what I think. And it turns out I'm not the one, at work, to catch viruses and malware and whatnot, even if I've disabled the AV. Pretty soon I will switch to a more IT-adminish role in the company and I will try to respect this rule. If you're good enough to disable protected stuff... you're not the one I have to be con
Get Sophos (Score:3, Informative)
Setup MailMonitor on a Linux box for incoming email scanning and you will end up with a solid AV solution.
Symantec Antivirus Corporate is Better than Norton (Score:2)
Cost will still be an issue though.
Re:SAV is great (Score:2)
Most of my customers are running one or two versions back and they are still updating and protecting against current threats, for most the only reason to upgrade would be to support the Microsoft Security Senter introduced in XP SP2.
Sounds like your experience is unique, or maybe your exxagerating(sp).
Re:SAV is great (Score:2)
I've had the problem, I used to work for Yuba College in Marysville, CA, USA, and we had Norton Corp 7 when I got there, and then went to SAV 8, and f
Bitdefender (Score:2)
PCCillin (Score:1)
I use their personal edition and have been very happy about it (doesn't feel nearly as bloated as symantec and mcafee will often feel). However this is all based on feel... I don't have any benchmarks or evidence for you...
Trend Micro (Score:1)
http://www.cdw.com/shop/products/default.aspx?EDC
Trend used to be good (Score:2)
Try AVG.
AVAST! (Score:4, Interesting)
The best part is you can download it and run it completely unrestricted for 60 days to see if it works for you.
Re:AVAST! (Score:1)
Re:AVAST! (Score:2)
The home edition is free, you merely have them send
Re:AVAST! (Score:3, Informative)
I agree. I recommended AVG for years to my customers, but decided to give Avast! a try on a customer's infected PC after AVG. Avast! found a virus AVG didn't and uses 15%-20% less memory.
But I also recommend winpatrol [winpatrol.com]. Not an AV program, it blocks out most malware, including some of the nastier stuff that can stealth-download itself into a Windows computer as long as the user is online. It only uses about 4 mb of memory to run in the background -- but I have no idea how much an enterprise solution would co
Re:AVAST! (Score:2)
Unfortunately, Avast Home edition for Windows does not offer a certain feature I consider extremely useful — a command-line scanner. I'd love to set up family members with Firefox and the Download Scan [mozdev.org] extension so that new downloads get checked automatically, but that's not an option with Avast Home.
Linux (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Linux (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Linux (Score:2)
Sophos SBE (Score:2)
Kaspersky Anti-Virus (Score:2)
Hit their website [kaspersky.com] and you can even get a 1-month demo [kaspersky.com] from them to see if it'll work for you.
Re: (Score:2)
Don't get McAfee (Score:2)
The fact is that McAfee allowed that to happen. For something like that to pass their internal (nonexistent?) testing procedures means their processes are really _crap_.
Sure most companies have crap processes, but when it comes to mass deletion of files crap, it's time to walk away and not look back (unless you're going to sue them).
A few other AV companies also have had similar problems: Sophos had a false positive for Mac OSX
Symantec, unfortunately (Score:2)
I do have ClamAV scanning incoming emails, but it is still necessary to have a local AV on the machines. I don't like Symantec and find it too expensive, but I must say it really works. So I did a fresh minimal install of Win2K on the old server box, and setup Symantec Enterprise on tha
Why do you need "a local AV"? (Score:2)
If you are letting users download random EXEs off the Internet and running them... ugh. Well, you could always set up a proxy to run them through ClamAV...
Personally, I use ClamWin on my Windows desktop, and I scan maybe once or twice a year. Other than that, I just keep things sane -- no random downloads of EXEs, no running EXEs from email attachments...
And how do you know it really works? Maybe Symantec just "finds" something now and then in order to keep you scared...
Re:Why do you need "a local AV"? (Score:2)
Because people insert random CDs and USB keys, and they check their personal email through webmail, etc. (and someone infected his brand new laptop on which the AV was not installed yet, with an exe in a password protected zip, which he got from his private webmail acount! Yes, they do that sort of thing. At least once)
I don't scan my own machine regularly either, and also just "keep things sane" and occasionally scan a virus out of curiosity to see what it is.
You obviously don'
Kaspersky (Score:2)
Uses even fewer resources than AVG (they claim to work with Pentium Is, but I've never used with anything lower than a 500 MHz P3), and far better at actually stopping viruses.
Their info can be found here: http://www.kaspersky.com/kav6 [kaspersky.com]
Trend Micro (Score:1)
Before that I'd used Norton's solution, and while it worked, I never want to go back. In that version (7-something, I think, maybe 8) it was a real pain
Is antivirus still relevant? (Score:1, Flamebait)
ClamWin [clamwin.com] may be all the AntiVirus you need, if you need any at all. You're already scanning incoming email, after all...
Nevermind. I use Linux, I obviously will never fully get the stupidities of Windows Malware Control.
ClamAV is quite good - but there are tricks (Score:3, Insightful)
Personally, I use ClamAV on the mailserver (incombination with Xamime - http://xamime.com/ [xamime.com] works well and keeps a majority of the things out.
However, you really need an orthagonal approach too, that includes banning things that aren't meant to be coming into your network in the first place, as well has having perhaps a different branded AV agent on the client machines.
Getting rid of (if possible) the vectors used by the viruses on the workstations helps a lot too. ActiveX, Macros (okay, not many people can live without those in office I suppose).
Re:ClamAV is quite good - but there are tricks (Score:2)
Definitely. While not sure-fire (webmail is a big hole) our mailserver simply rejects messages with common virus-laden file extensions. Here's our list from postfix's filtering:
#block unsafe attachments
(asd|bat|chm|cmd|com|dll
AVG's Pro Edition (Score:2)
F-Prot (Score:3, Interesting)
$5 per PC/yr, less in volume. At >100 it goes down to $2/yr.
A bit of a clunky interface, but the users will never have to bother with it. Set it to auto-update from a server (which updates from f-prot), tell it to mail you when a virus hits the real-time scanner. Simple, cheap, fast, and effective. The updater and real-time scanner take less than 1MB memory.
Try the free trial, keep the (free) DOS scanner on a bootable CD with your tools, even if you don't buy the GUI version.
Boot From CD (Score:2)
Software Restriction Policies (Score:2)
Re:Software Restriction Policies (Score:2)
Anti-virus is not something you just decide something else will take care of. It's a necessity in any environment that your systems are required for everyday business. Even if you arn't running Windows.
Re:Software Restriction Policies (Score:2)
People using anti-virus software try to prevent the execution of malicious code based on a blacklist (the virus definitions and heuristics). Software Restriction Policies do exactly the same except that they use a whitelist instead of a blacklist. Every security professional will acknowledge that this is a superior approach.
Re:Software Restriction Policies (Score:2)
Norman is pretty good. (Score:2)
I suggest you take a look at it. I have no idea how much it costs, but it "just works" pretty well.
BitDefender, comparison link (Score:2, Informative)
BitDefender
http://www.bitdefender.com/ [bitdefender.com]
The New Virus Fighters: Our Antivirus Picks
http://www.pcworld.com/reviews/article/0,aid,1241
Kaspersky all the way (Score:2)
Damien
Panda (Score:2)
http://www.pandasoftware.com/home/empresas/defaul
Re:Panda (Score:2)
As to AVG - I like it too. It's installed on my wife's XP box - the only Windows box in the house.
Semi OT: Out of the box OSS email scanner gateway? (Score:2)
At work we have a 30 seat license to SAV w/server based email scanning. I'd happily switch to something cheaper than SAV; however, once I price in the server based email scanning, there hasn't been much savings in the past. The email scanning is pretty much half the cost, but it is something that could be done well by an OSS disto. I am NOT wi
CA's eTrust AV: I've heard it's good and cheap. (Score:2, Insightful)
Regarding costs, they claim on their page that: "Affordability. eTrust Antivirus gives you industrial-strength protection at a low price. We guarantee a lower price over the cost of renewing your current antivirus subscription, and we offer the lowest total cost of ownership of any antivirus software solution
Great response (Score:4, Informative)
Second: cripes, I've finally developed computer user grammer. It passes spell check but not basic grammar.
Third: some clarifications. The reason we keep AV running is that is because it's the right thing to do. Firefox, T-bird, and the firewall keep most of the bad stuff out. OpenOffice will cut down the risks even further, but we've still got a couple of points of entry to worry about. One is laptops. Even though no one has admin except those who need it (me and the other members of the tech. group), users can still install some simple programs. It's only a matter of time before somebody gets a network aware worm and brings the machine on site. Another point of entry is USB drives. We're pushing people towards those instead of floppies for the sake of relieability. In order to balence safety with usability, we add the layer of protection offered by AV.
In addition, WSUS isn't always on the ball. Occasionally you get a machine that quits grabbing updates, or one that never showed up in the first place. It's nice that I can keep those machines somewhat better protected with an additional program. On top of all that, we're an all volunteer group, so AV software gives us an addition layer of "false sense of security." I know that I can count on the firewall, the patch server, AND AV to buy me 48 to 72 hours of safety should the crap hit the fan like it did with Sasser or Blaster. Anti-virus, like any single layer of protection, isn't infallable, but it damn sure helps.
Linux: We're doing that in some areas, but the whole site isn't an option right now. Most of our users are technophobes, usually retirees. Actually, recovering technophobes now
Thanks again for the responses. I've gotten exactly what I wanted, solid reading material for a few days and some worthwhile points to ponder.