MSE Fails Certification (Again)

Isengard

No Hobbits Allowed
At the end of November, German anti-virus lab AV-TEST published the results of tests conducted with twenty-four of the latest anti-virus programs for home users. Twenty-three products received AV-TEST certification when used with Windows 7, but Microsoft's own Security Essentials suite failed. Now two months later, the suite has failed certification again.

The lab publishes tests results every two months, and for this latest installment for November and December, the firm evaluated 25 consumer antivirus security programs. This time around, Microsoft Security Essentials 4.1 wasn't the only one to fail certification, as it was joined by PC Tools Internet Security 2012 and AhnLab Internet Security 8.0.

According to the results, Microsoft Security Essentials 4.1 scored a 1.5 out of 6.0 in the Protection category, caused by its lower-than-average protection against 0-day malware attacks, inclusive of web and e-mail threats (Real-World Testing). Its detection of a "representative set of malware discovered in the last 2-3 months" was also lower than the industry average.

In the Repair department, Microsoft Security Essentials 4.1 scored a 3.0 out of 6.0. The suite's ability to remove all active components of widespread malware (including Rootkits and stealth malware) fell under the industry average, and its ability to detect actively running widespread malware (including Rootkits and stealth malware) also fell under the industry standard.

What's surprising here is that Microsoft Security Essentials has failed again. After all, it's deemed as the most popular security suite not only in North America, but across the world because (1) it's free and (2) it's native to the Windows platform. That said, Microsoft's in-house security suite should be at the top of the certification ranks, not along the bottom with the failures.

Dave Forstrom, director of Trustworthy Computing for Microsoft, responded to a query from CNET about the double failure. Unsurprisingly, he didn't offer any reasons as to why the software failed two consecutive certification tests.

"Microsoft believes in a defense in-depth strategy for antimalware protection that includes using Microsoft Security Essentials / Windows Defender in tandem with other appropriate security features such as SmartScreen, as well as keeping all software up-to-date," he wrote. "Our antimalware engine is designed to work in concert with these Microsoft security features to create a comprehensive security strategy. Microsoft focuses its protection efforts on what affects our customers, using real-world data collected from more than 600 million systems worldwide. We weigh these samples by severity and prevalence of malware in the wild."

Cnet points out that Microsoft Security Essentials 4.1 missed certification by a whole point in the recent certification test, a lower score than the previous failure when Microsoft missed certification by half a point.

Source

I've been saying all along that MSE is a piece of crap. I've seen way too many client PC's that had MSE installed not only fail to detect malware, but also get disabled by said malware so that it no longer starts up.

Do yourselves a favour if you are running MSE and replace it with one of the better free alternatives like Avast or Avira.
 
Don't be cheap, get a proper antivirus, less to worry about especially when it integrates with your internet use.
Still this gives me a source next time I say that MSE sucks
 
Do yourselves a favour if you are running MSE and replace it with one of the better free alternatives like Avast or Avira.

Unfortunately Avast is a piece of shit as well. I used it for a 3 month period, liked it in general (as soon as I could figure out how to turn of the annoying voice), but then ran into virus symptoms. Did proper scans, but nothing showed. Took it off, put Nod32 trial on, ran scans, and found 12 virusses.. Now I'm a die-hard Nod32 fanboy.
 
Unfortunately Avast is a piece of shit as well. I used it for a 3 month period, liked it in general (as soon as I could figure out how to turn of the annoying voice), but then ran into virus symptoms. Did proper scans, but nothing showed. Took it off, put Nod32 trial on, ran scans, and found 12 virusses.. Now I'm a die-hard Nod32 fanboy.

Yeah same here. Nod32 FTW.
 
Unfortunately Avast is a piece of shit as well. I used it for a 3 month period, liked it in general (as soon as I could figure out how to turn of the annoying voice), but then ran into virus symptoms. Did proper scans, but nothing showed. Took it off, put Nod32 trial on, ran scans, and found 12 virusses.. Now I'm a die-hard Nod32 fanboy.

Me too :D can't see myself using anything else
 
Source

I've been saying all along that MSE is a piece of crap. I've seen way too many client PC's that had MSE installed not only fail to detect malware, but also get disabled by said malware so that it no longer starts up.

Do yourselves a favour if you are running MSE and replace it with one of the better free alternatives like Avast or Avira.

My thoughts exactly too... but I got blasted over at MyBB for making the statement a while back... Lots of MSE fanboys over there.

I don't know Avast, but I used AVG quite long until they did something that made my computer freeze up completely (so that it required a cold restart). Was a mission to track the issue to AVG, but eventually did a complete clean install with only Windows 7 and AVG loaded and it still froze. So I removed AVG and pc never froze again (well, not like that anyway).

So eventually I switched to Avira which I think is pretty much the best of the lot BUT I see they have quite a number of ad popups in the free version these days (I switched to the paid version a couple of years ago)... actually, I read somewhere that Avira is the first anti virus to be classified as adware due to their daily popups.

Edit: Ah, here we go. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Avira#Controversies
 
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Cool thanks trying out the trail version now.
Best paid one I have used for 3 years was Kasperksy but the latest release was way to resource heavy.

Avira use to be good 2 years ago but the popups where insane the lats time I tried it.
Avg sucks it lets your pc get infected before it tries to remove it.
Avast was better but nothing special.
Panda Antivirus way to many hits and misses. Kept finding Trojans that was not there.
Zone Alarm free version is limited.

WOW a quick scan is taking over 6 hours to scan my pc wtf Nod32 is really that slow guys?
 
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