What's it in for the makers of free antivirus software?

S

Spin

Guest
Gurus,

Free antivirus software such as Avast http://www.avast.com and NOD32

http://www.eset.com are well spoken of. My question is, given that they are

free, what's it in for the makers of this software? Because of this

question, I am hesitant to switch off of Symantec or McAfee.

--

Spin

 
S

Shenan Stanley

Guest
Spin wrote:<span style="color:blue">

> Free antivirus software such as Avast http://www.avast.com and

> NOD32 http://www.eset.com are well spoken of. My question is, given

> that they are free, what's it in for the makers of this software? Because

> of this question, I am hesitant to switch off of Symantec

> or McAfee.</span>

NOD32 is not free...

The makers of the free software (antivirus applications in this discussion)

hope that by giving away a version (just a version ) of their software for

free - some people will purchase the full version of said software. Some

people do.

McAfee and Symantec - they protect just fine most of the time - it is the

bloat that makes them not as popular.

Good Comparison Page for AV software: http://www.av-comparatives.org/

AntiVir (Free and up)

http://www.free-av.com/

avast! (Free and up)

http://www.avast.com/

AVG Anti-Virus System (Free and up)

http://free.grisoft.com/

eset NOD32 (~$39.00 and up)

http://www.eset.com/products/

Kaspersky Anti-Virus (~$39.95 and up)

http://www.kaspersky.com/kaspersky_anti-virus

McAfee VirusScan (~$39.99 and up)

http://www.mcafee.com/

Panda Antivirus (~$39.95 and up)

http://www.pandasecurity.com/homeusers/solutions/antivirus/

(Free Online Scanner:

http://www.pandasecurity.com/homeusers/solutions/activescan/)

Symantec (Norton) AntiVirus (~$39.99 and up)

http://snipurl.com/13e12

--

Shenan Stanley

MS-MVP

--

How To Ask Questions The Smart Way

http://www.catb.org/~esr/faqs/smart-questions.html

 
V

VanguardLH

Guest
"Spin" <Spin@invalid.com> wrote in message

news:6549jjF2cffpiU1@mid.individual.net...<span style="color:blue">

> Gurus,

>

> Free antivirus software such as Avast http://www.avast.com and NOD32

> http://www.eset.com are well spoken of. My question is, given that

> they are free, what's it in for the makers of this software? Because

> of this question, I am hesitant to switch off of Symantec or McAfee.</span>

Free versions are:

- Crippleware. They don't have all the protection and features of the

full verison.

- Lureware. They want you to eventually buy their paid version.

 
A

Anteaus

Guest
AVG in particular make their money from commercial sales. If they didn't

release a free version then probably no-one would try it, so in that case no

IT manager would buy it. I guess the others rely on much the same strategy.

Norton and McAfee rely on OEMs preinstalling their products, a tactic which

is highly antisocial, since it effectively removes the computer-buyer's

freedom of choice. It also arguably creates a 'captive market' in which

product quality is less important than if you are trying to convince the

punter to buy your software.

 
C

Chad Boyd

Guest
I disagree with this. I have used AVG Free

(http://free.grisoft.com/doc/download-free-...-virus/us/frt/0) on many

systems over the years and have found it to, usually, take up less system

resources than Symantec Corporate Edition but provides the same level of

protection.

That's not to say that I have never had a system infected, but I have had to

"lobotomize" systems that had both free software and paid software on them.

Your best bet, if money is an issue, is to go with the best free AV solution

you can find and in addition to that install a popular free spyware scanner.

Windows Defender seems to do a fairly decent job. I use this in addition to

the Malicious Software Removal Tool (updated monthly) and Ad-Aware.

You can never be completely protected. As unfortunate as this sounds, your

only real solution seems to be to protect yourself in a variety of ways and

limit how your systems are used.

As to the question of "What's it in for the makers of this software?" I

partly agree that some of them do allow you to use portions of their product

in hopes that you will purchase a full version in the future. Although there

are those, and to some this might be hard to comprehend, that program

because they like it. I have personally written apps in the past that solve

real-world problems (nothing on the level of an anti-virus app) and have

released these to the community through SourceForge and the like. I have

never asked for monetary compensation for my "side" work. I enjoy doing it

because I get a rush from working on a project to solve a problem. Think

about how your grandfather might have done woodworking as a hobby because he

liked to see the finished product. I feel this is comparable.

I hope this helps...

On 3/28/08 10:37 AM, in article uNMRPmOkIHA.4356@TK2MSFTNGP02.phx.gbl,

"VanguardLH" <V@nguard.LH> wrote:

<span style="color:blue">

> "Spin" <Spin@invalid.com> wrote in message

> news:6549jjF2cffpiU1@mid.individual.net...<span style="color:green">

>> Gurus,

>>

>> Free antivirus software such as Avast http://www.avast.com and NOD32

>> http://www.eset.com are well spoken of. My question is, given that

>> they are free, what's it in for the makers of this software? Because

>> of this question, I am hesitant to switch off of Symantec or McAfee.</span>

>

>

> Free versions are:

> - Crippleware. They don't have all the protection and features of the

> full verison.

> - Lureware. They want you to eventually buy their paid version.

> </span>

 
Top Bottom