Re: [LINK] McAfee now Intel Security

2014-01-13 Thread Jim Birch
My personal take on John McAffee improved greatly when I discovered he was
no longer associated with that software and was just another regular
gun-toting drug-crazed egomaniac.

- Jim
___
Link mailing list
Link@mailman.anu.edu.au
http://mailman.anu.edu.au/mailman/listinfo/link


Re: [LINK] McAfee now Intel Security

2014-01-13 Thread Scott Howard
To quote John McAfee on the change :

“I am now everlastingly grateful to Intel for freeing me from this terrible
association with the worst software on the planet. These are not my words,
but the words of millions of irate users,” he said, adding, “My elation at
Intel’s decision is beyond words.”

  Scott




On Mon, Jan 13, 2014 at 1:05 AM, step...@melbpc.org.au wrote:

 Intel to scrap McAfee name, give away mobile security tools

  (By the way, check out John McAfee today :-)
   http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bKgf5PaBzyg)

 By Gregg Keizer (Computerworld (US))10 January, 2014
 http://www.arnnet.com.au/article/535674/intel_scrap_mcafee_name_give_away_m
 obile_security_tools/


 Intel this week said it would ditch the venerable McAfee brand for its
 security products and services, and offer free mobile security software to
 customers running Android, iOS and other operating systems on their
 smartphones and tablets.

 McAfee is one of the oldest brands in computer security, a name that's been
 in use most of the years since its 1987 founding, even as the company
 changed hands several times. But Intel wants to shed the brand this year
 for Intel Security in a staged roll-out as products update.

 We aren't making the move lightly, we're not divorcing entirely, said
 Mike Fey, the CTO of McAfee in an interview this week, adding that Intel
 will retain the long-used logo, a red shield with the letter M dominant.
 Outside the U.S., McAfee actually doesn't translate well, but Intel is
 [an] understood [brand].

 Intel bought McAfee in 2010 in a deal valued at $7.7 billion. The
 acquisition was completed in February 2011.

 Fey denied that the name change had been triggered by the erratic behavior
 of its founder and namesake, John McAfee, who in 2012 made headlines after
 he fled Belize, where authorities wanted to question him in the death of
 his neighbor. McAfee turned up in Guatemala, and in December 2012
 authorities there expelled him back to the U.S. where he currently lives.

 Last year, John McAfee released an over-the-top profanity, sex and drug
 image-laced video (which has collected over 4.6 million viewings) where he
 blasted the software carrying his surname.

 In December, after talk of Intel changing its security brand surfaced, John
 McAfee pleaded on his website for help in making that happen. I would be
 thrilled to finally free myself, my image, and my name, he said.

 After Intel's announcement this week, John McAfee tweeted, To the company
 formerly known as McAfee: Thank you! Thank you!

 It seems the feelings were mutual.

 As an employee, I'm happy to separate, said Fey as he argued that buyers
 did not associate John McAfee with the company he started.

 Along with the name change, Intel also said it would give away a stand-
 alone mobile security product, whose name hasn't been finalized, to device
 owners.

 We are bringing our award-winning security to every mobile device: phones,
 tablets, wearables, said Intel CEO Brian Krzanich this week at CES. We
 want to bring this [mobile security] capability to everybody because we
 believe this is critical to enable this ecosystem.

 Krzanich said the software will be available for both the Intel and ARM
 processor architectures.

 This is not some fremium strategy and it won't have ads, Fey said in his
 interview. It really is a commitment that computing should be safe.

 While the details of the free offering weren't announced -- Fey said Intel
 is still working on the timing and even the composition of the deal -- the
 software will be stand-alone, full-featured and composed of current
 products or pieces of them.

 McAfee currently charges $30 annually for its Mobile Security package,
 which supports Android, BlackBerry, Symbian and Kindle Fire.

 Most [mobile devices] are unprotected, said Fey. That needs to change.

 Intel will be following other mobile security vendors in making its
 software free. San Francisco-based Lookout, for example, gives away its
 widely-used Android antivirus app to individuals, but charges businesses $5
 per device per month.

 If we build a relationship [with a customer], we will find monetization
 down the road, said Fey, hinting at Intel's business model. Providing a
 valuable service is good for us long term, and we want to be seen as the
 trusted security provider.

 In any case, Fey acknowledged, mobile device owners have been trained by
 app developers and the stores where they distribute their wares to be leery
 of all but the lowest-priced software. The prices that vendors charge for
 PC software, for instance, are simply impossible for mobiles. It's not
 what the space is about, you have to think about [mobile] differently, Fey
 said.

 Lookout took Intel's move in stride.

 We've expected other companies to take a similar approach, and look
 forward to seeing more companies prioritizing consumer safety in this
 digital world, said Lookout co-founder and CTO Kevin Mahaffey in an email