Checkpoint ZoneAlarm Internet SecuritySuite 7.1 Denham Springs LA

Checkpoint offers a full-featured firewall, but the rest of the suite is flawed.

Local Companies

Computer Evolutions
225-261-9650
14465 Wax RD
Baton Rouge, LA
Detel Computer Solutions
225-952-9430
10434 Plaza Americana DR
Baton Rouge, LA
Compu Cure
225-291-4094
2834 S Sherwood Forest Blvd
Baton Rouge, LA
Computer Exchange
225-274-1400
10120 Florida Blvd
Baton Rouge, LA
Computer Heaven
225-70815-8410
577 Oak Villa Blvd
Baton Rouge, LA
Agwecams Information Technology
225-715-4621
18938 Beaujolaes Ave
Baton Rouge, LA
Computer Software Academy
225-755-6900
11811 Industriplex Blvd
Baton Rouge, LA
Construction Software Technologies
225-70806-4274
5700 Florida Blvd
Baton Rouge, LA
CMA Technology Solutions
225-927-9200
8180 YMCA Plaza DR
Baton Rouge, LA
Applied Technology Group
225-216-2632
5555 Hilton Ave
Baton Rouge, LA

Unlike the other seven security suites we tested for "All-in-One Security Suites: Tried and Tested," CheckPoint's ZoneAlarm Internet SecuritySuite 7.1 began with a firewall and then expanded to add other features. It shows. ZoneAlarm 7.1 has a feature-rich firewall, to which it has added the impressive Kaspersky antivirus engine for malware detection and removal. Unfortunately, ZoneAlarm lacks the extensive scan options and the smooth interface of Kaspersky's Internet Security 7.0 suite. Plus, the antivirus and antispyware interface has only bare-bones configuration options.

One major reason for ZoneAlarm'sunimpressive showing is that we tested the suites on a Vista Premium PC, and ZoneAlarm's Vista compatibility is incomplete. Working under Microsoft's latest OS, the ZoneAlarm antivirus scanner does not scan e-mail traffic or instant messaging communications for malware. (A separate antispam engine is licensed from SonicWall's MailFrontier.) Checkpoint says that this is by design, but we can't see the benefit of refraining from scanning e-mail traffic. The Vista suite also loses the parental controls available in the XP version, as well as protection for sensitive data and blocking of known spyware Web sites. The suite lacks a Web antiphishing feature in both its XP and its Vista versions.

For the firewall, ZoneAlarm offers the most features and options of any suite in our roundup, hands-down. It comes with an excellent installation wizard, and a training mode automatically bumps up to maximum protection after learning about your programs. Even at its "maximum protect" setting, the firewall will check against a central database of known programs before bugging you to decide whether a new program can connect to the Internet.

On the other hand, ZoneAlarm was one of only two suites that didn't entirely protect a test PC from an outside scan (Avira Premium Security Suite was the other). The firewall left a communications channel (port 135) open, and it didn't entirely hide (or stealth) the closed channels, unlike most firewalls. Checkpoint says that our results are anomalous. We suspect that the underlying reason is an incompatibility between our test PC's network adapter and the Vista version of ZoneAlarm, as AV-Test.org says that the XP version did not exhibit this problem.

As we expected, ZoneAlarm's scores in our malware detection tests were very similar to those of the Kaspersky suite. It finished third among our eight suites by catching 96 percent of dormant samples in AV-Test.org's huge 674,589-strong collection;. and it found 14 percent of unknown (to the program) malware in tests using one-month-old virus signature files. Despite using its own antispyware engine rather than Kaspersky's, ZoneAlarm's suite caught exactly the same number of spyware and adware samples as Kaspersky's suite: an above-average 90 percent.

ZoneAlarm lagged significantly behind Kaspersky on scan speed, however--at just 3.62 megabytes per second, it turned in the slowest time of any suite we tested. It also popped up the most false alerts, producing warnings about 12 harmless files. And like many suites we tested, it did a lackluster job of cleanup. The program removed only half of all files and Registry entries introduced by malware infections.

ZoneAlarm's options and interface for antivirus scanning are anemic. You can't decide whether to scan within archives for a user-started scan or for an automatic, on-access scan. You can't decide much of anything else, either. It's strange that you have many more choices for setting up the antispam engine, which ties in to Outlook and Outlook Express and is licensed from MailFrontier, than you do for the more-important antivirus scans.

In the end, ZoneAlarm's suite is good example of why you might still want to purchase a stand-alone security program instead of a hybrid suite. If you're interested in the suite's firewall, which is much more extensive than those in other suites we tested, you're probably better off buying the firewall on its own and pairing it with your choice of antivirus program.

Erik Larkin

Featured Local Company

Computer Evolutions

225-261-9650
14465 Wax RD
Baton Rouge, LA


Rss   Delicious   Digg   Add To My Yahoo   Add To My Google   Bookmark   Search Plugin

Topics:
Advertising Family Home Services Real Estate Resources
Business Services Fashion Industrial Goods & Services Retail & Consumer Services
Career Financial Services Insurance Software
Cars Food & Beverage Internet Technology
Computer Hardware Franchise Legal Telecommunications
Construction Health Miscellaneous Trade Shows
Education Holidays Nightlife Travel
Entertainment Home Appliances Online Database Weddings
Environmental Home Electronics Pets World History