Trend Micro AntiVirus plus Anti-Spyware 2007 La Grande OR

Poor performance at detecting malicious software (overall and proactive) resulted in a bottom-of-the-barrel ranking.

Local Companies

Onlinenw
(503) 883-9200
McMinnville, OR
Sterling Communications Inc
(503) 968-8908
14945 SW Sequoia Pkwy Ste 110
Portland, OR
Mad Matilda's
(541) 523-4588
1917 Main St
Baker City, OR
Douglas Fast Net
(541) 673-6616
Roseburg, OR
Matrix Digital Media Inc
(541) 929-4684
1112 Applegate St
Philomath, OR
Unicom's
(541) 276-6653
304 S Main St
Pendleton, OR
Bendnet
(541) 385-3331
Bend, OR
Clearwire
(541) 322-3030
63455 N Highway 97
Bend, OR
Clearwire
(541) 688-1127
1600 Coburg Rd
Eugene, OR
Proworks Llc
(541) 752-9885
1600 SW Western Blvd
Corvallis, OR

Trend Micro's AntiVirus plus Anti-Spyware 2007 came in dead last in our "Virus Stoppers" antivirus roundup test of eight products. Its disappointing finish was primarily due to its lackluster performance at detecting malware samples: The program missed almost one in five samples, for a poor catch rate of 82 percent.

Trend Micro did somewhat better at proactively detecting unknown malware using one-month-old signature files, but even here, its 43 percent detection rate was the third-worst showing. Coupled with a relatively expensive $40 price tag and no renewal discount, Trend Micro's performance leaves much to be desired.

On the plus side, the program installed smoothly, was easy to use, and includes good default settings for the average person, such as an automatically scheduled full-system scan. The software provides a user-configurable scheduled scan and checks for definition updates every 3 hours. These defaults are a snap to change via an intuitive and smooth interface that will appeal to even the most nontechnical user.

One particularly useful feature scans for known Microsoft product vulnerabilities. If a machine is missing an important security patch, for example, the application guides the user to Microsoft's Windows Update site to download and apply the appropriate updates and patches.

Trend Micro's AntiVirus scans e-mail traffic over the POP3 and SMTP protocols, but unlike almost every other program we tested (except for Grisoft AVG 7.5 Anti-Virus Professional Edition), it does not scan HTML traffic. Also, Trend Micro's product stands alone in being unable to launch a manual file scan through a right-click within Windows Explorer, a weakness that the company says it will remedy in future updates. And the application's antispyware protection has an annoying habit of labeling tracking cookies as dangerous spyware.

We tested the Vista version of TrendMicro AntiVirus plus Anti-Spyware 2007 for our "Virus Stoppers" roundup. An XP version of the software is also available.

Ryan Naraine

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