Security Suite Smackdown, Part I
Review: Eight of the biggest names in security go head-to-head in this roundup of the bestand worstof the apps that aim to keep you safe. (PCMag.com)
Fall and winter are a great time for malware purveyors. All those pure, innocent, uncorrupted new PCs being unboxed, set up and connected to that font of all that is dangerous, filthy and malevolent: the Internet. Okay, maybe you dont believe the information superhighway is quite that tainted, and maybe it isnt. But if you hook up your brand-new PC to it without some sort of protection, theres a reasonable chance that youll come to have a different opinion, and quickly.Because, make no mistake, malwares alive and well.
For advice on how to secure your network and applications, as well as the latest security news, visit Ziff Davis Internets Security IT Hub.
Innocent bystanders have moved vast amounts of money, personal information and business intelligence online, and that attracts criminals.
Fortunately, the new PC season is also the time when security software makers come to market with the latest versions of their flagship products, the security suites.
McAfee chides Microsoft over Vista security. Click here to read more.
These apps aim to give you an impregnable defense, protecting you from every threat under the connected sun. Anti-malwareanti-virus, anti-spam, anti-spyware, anti-phishingif its out there, theyre against it.
Add in firewalls, content filtering, parental controls and keylogger detection, and youve got a online suit of armor thats theoretically proof against any and all threats. And the armor has done a reasonably good job, by and large.
However (to stretch the metaphor a bit), just as a full suit of armor can be so bulky you cant move when wearing it, these suites are often so bloated they slow mighty computers to a crawl.
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Check out eWEEK.coms for the latest security news, reviews and analysis. And for insights on security coverage around the Web, take a look at eWEEK.com Security Center Editor Larry Seltzers Weblog. 

Sean Carroll is the senior editor of PC Magazine's software, Internet and networking team. The team's reviews appear online and in the First Looks section of the magazine's print edition.







