Final Version of Windows Defender Now Available

Oct 25, 2006

Microsoft released the final version of its Windows Defender antispyware tool 
today, while security rivals squabbled about whether the company has given
them sufficient
access to Windows Vista
to build competing products.

The release of the final version suggests that Microsoft thinks Windows 
Defender is sufficiently stable and bug-free for mainstream use. The final 
release
fixes about 400 bugs in beta 2 of the product, which was
released in February .
Beta versions of the program were downloaded 34 million times, a Microsoft 
spokeswoman said.

Along with the bug fixes, customers using Windows XP and Windows 2003 get two 
free support calls for Windows Defender. The product is no longer supported
for Windows 2000 users, since support for that OS ended in June, Microsoft said.

The software is available
free of charge .
It's in English now, with German, Japanese and other languages to follow 
shortly. It competes with free tools from
Lavasoft ,
Spybot
(Safer Networking), and others.

Windows Defender is also included with Microsoft's new antivirus product,
Windows OneCare ,
which
went on sale
in June for $50 per year.

Some Security Vendors Upset

Security vendors have been riled
by Microsoft's entry into their market. McAfee and Symantec say they are being 
locked out of the 64-bit version of Vista by a kernel-level security feature
in the OS called
PatchGuard .
Microsoft has dragged its feet in providing access to the kernel, they 
complain, which could prevent them from fully protecting their customers.

Security vendor Sophos used the dispute to take a shot at its rivals. It said 
it has all the information about Vista that it needs, and accused Symantec
and McAfee of not having designed their products with 64-bit Vista in mind.

"We've taken a different approach, by focusing on catching bad behavior before 
it has a chance to occur," Sophos said in a statement. "Additionally, we
are building our technology by making use of supported Microsoft interfaces 
rather than by trying to subvert them. That's why we're ready for 64-bit Vista,
and others aren't."

Others Aren't Sympathetic

Sandi Hardmeier, a Microsoft security expert who runs
Spyware Sucks ,
was sympathetic with Sophos' position.

"I've got to agree with this; if McAfee and Symantec did a little more coding 
and a little less bitching, they might get somewhere," she says.

Hardmeier has argued that McAfee and Symantec should change the way they code 
their products instead of
relying on access to the Vista kernel .
Only by coming up with a new design for antivirus software will any security 
vendor be able to fully protect its customers, she says.

McAfee shot back today. If Sophos doesn't need access to Microsoft's kernel 
then it's because it offers a less sophisticated range of products, it said.

"Single-product vendors, like Sophos, may well not have an issue with 
Microsoft. However, for an innovative security risk management vendor like 
McAfee,
that offers its customers comprehensive security protection, full and 
unfettered access to the kernel is vital if we are to protect users," McAfee 
said.

Sophos responded that McAfee is out of touch with its products.

Microsoft, needless to say, seemed to enjoy the bickering.

"Okay, we all recognize this as a marketing move. But, hey, it's a marketing 
move I can smile about," Jeff Jones, a strategy director with Microsoft's 
Security
Technology Unit,
wrote in his blog .

He went on to argue that Sophos may indeed have an innovative approach to host 
improvement prevention systems.

http://www.pcworld.com/article/id,127640-pg,1-RSS,RSS/article.html

Vikas Kapoor,
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