Showing posts with label Opswat. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Opswat. Show all posts

Thursday, December 17, 2015

AV-Comparatives Real World Protection Test – August to November 2015

Kaspersky and BitDefender topped twenty companies in AV-Comparatives Real World Protection Test, August to November 2015. These companies finished in the top two, receiving three stars. Both had only one compromised file. Six other companies received three stars over the test period.  Eight of the twenty companies in the test received two stars. Default settings were used for all products.

Trivia question – which North America based malware company received three stars?

Four companies merit the Hall of Shame award for the period, garnering one or zero stars. From the bottom up, ThreatTrack Vipre, Lavasoft, Quick Heat and BullGuard.   Banished to a timeout corner   for being in triple digits for wrongly blocked files – Mcafee, ThreatTrack, and Lavasoft.

An informative graphic in the report depicts the range of protection over the four-month period for each product. The top products were extremely consistent, which is what you would want in a security solution.  The bottom products, less so. 

Not all results are being provided because there is no charge for the report. It can be downloaded at http://www.av-comparatives.org/dynamic-tests/. You can also learn more about the test methodology in the fourteen-page report.  The products tested ranged from free antivirus to internet security suites.  Kudos to AV-Comparatives for detailing some of the statistics methodologies used in compiling their report. Your eyes won’t glaze over as you read about this.

As always, the top products may not be top in terms of number of “likes” they’ve received on their respective Facebook pages.  In  the denouement, should one give more weight to independent third party testing, or a fan club?

An interesting article to read by Adam Winn at San Francisco based OPSWAT,  (www.opswat.com) Sorry Symantec - Antivirus is Not Dead .  Today’s antivirus/malware protection utilizes more than just pattern files and heuristics.

Hall of Shame and timeout corners are not part of AV-Comparatives’ formal designations. You can learn about the organization at www.av-comparatives.org

The trivia question answer – none.  McAfee and Fortinet received two stars.



Sunday, December 06, 2015

McAfee Going Away as a Brand?


Will 2016 by the  year that the McAfee brand will disappear from the public consciousness, or as a SKU, anyway?  If so, it will be the end of an era that began with McAfee’s founding in 1987. 

About McAfee

Wikipedia has published  a history of McAfee. Some of the below has not made it into that history (or was edited out).

At one point in time, during its growth phase, McAfee actively sold off firms that it did not see as being among the top three in their niche.  One of their sales (when they had the Network Associates name), was the data encryption company PGP (Pretty Good Privacy) which they had originally acquired in 1997, to  some of the founders of PGP. This was probably a whoops. In  2010, Symantec purchased this company, the same year Intel acquired McAfee.

To encourage use of their desktop product, McAfee aggressively gave away trial versions (remember CD’s?) of their endpoint product, causing some of their competitors to refer to the company as “McAfree”.

In the late 1990's, Trend Micro sued McAfee (and ultimately other, for patent infringement) "We are not just in it for the royalty," said Trend Micro's general counsel Bob Lowe. "Our main goal is having the products be prevented from being sold."  Nonetheless, the suit ended with a cross-licensing agreement.

The “rumor mill” had it that one McAfee executive used to keep a firearm in his desk.

In April 2003, after purchasing Intrusion Prevention company Intruvert for $100M, the company’s repositioned itself on its website as an intrusion prevention company. In fact, Barron’s in 2005 referred to McAfee as a leader in intrusion prevention  

On January 4, 2006, the Securities and Exchange Commission filed suit against McAfee for overstating its 1998–2000 net revenue by $622 million. Without admitting any wrongdoing, McAfee simultaneously settled the complaint, and agreed to pay a $50 million penalty and rework its accounting practices.  

Several executives left McAfee in the mid 2000’s in part because of an investigation related to back dating of options. The execs were exonerated.  The  CEO resigned at this time, for other reasons, and, went outside the company for a new CEO.

On August 19, 2010, Intel announced that it would buy McAfee for $48 a share in a deal valued at $7.68 billion. There was some push back from the European Union as they felt this deal would give Intel an unfair advantage in desktop security,  but the deal did go through.

On January 6, 2014, Intel CEO Brian Krzanich announced during the Consumer Electronics Show the name change from McAfee Security to Intel Security.  He stated that the McAfee red shield logo would remain and the firm would continue to operate as a wholly owned Intel subsidiary.

On the consumer side over the years, McAfee has been battling Symantec on the paid front. Market share? Around 12th in the October OPSWAT market share report. Mixed results in AV-Comparatives testing. They haven't been tested by Virus Bulletin in several years. 

Jumping Forward to 2015

October 28, 1915- Search Cloud Security - Intel Pulls Plug on McAfee SaaS Security Products

Intel Security will stop selling McAfee SaaS Endpoint and SaaS Email Protection and Archiving. Although new sales will stop in 2016. Existing customers can continue renewing their subscription and receiving support until Jan. 11, 2019, Intel Security said in its notices. Depending on certain subscription types, limited support will be available for some services until 2021.

October 29 - 2015 Channelnomics - McAfee  Brand Will Stay for Now

McAfee as a brand still holds a lot of equity for Intel Security, Lisa Matherly, and Intel VP of worldwide partner programs, marketing & operations, told Channelnomics at Intel Security's Focus 15 event in Las Vegas. 

"There is a lot of equity in the McAfee brand and there is some association with security with the Intel brand, but not as strong as the McAfee brand," Matherly pointed out. "So that's really what we're trying to do - bridge that and introduce the Intel security brand, start associating the security there, but also leverage what we have in the McAfee brand for the product portfolio. She added that the future of the McAfee brand is uncertain now and will be driven by the market.

November 5, 2015 - Intel Security Confirms Divestiture of McAfee NGFW, Firewall Enterprise Businesses in Memo to Partners 

In a memo to partners, Intel Security confirmed its divestiture of its McAfee Next-Generation Firewall and McAfee Firewall Enterprise businesses to Raytheon/Websense

So, pieces are being sold. Other pieces are being end of lifed. Other pieces are being retained though the word "McAfee" appears to be going away. 

Other Firms to the Rescue

 Since these announcements,  Mimecast and Sophos have leapt to the rescue, offering special pricing for users of some McAfee products.

Mimecast - You need a new solution offering both similar features and a smooth migration path – without worrying about a financial burden.

Sophos Promo - We Can Help Today. McAfee retired its email security and archiving products, and now you are scrambling to find an alternative. However, we have good news. Sophos’ solutions will help you turn an annoying replacement project into an upgrade opportunity. And we can do it right now.

Hold, hold onto those McAfee CD’s, tee shirts, and trade show giveaways. It may be the end of an era but they may be worth something on eBay.

One question (beyond the scope of this piece), is whether Intel should have even purchased McAfee in 2010  years ago? They are keeping some of the components. At the time (and even currently) large companies are purchasing jumping onto the security bandwagon to strengthen their security offerings or get into the business.
   
Also beyond the scope of this piece is any discussion of John McAfee, McAfee’s founder,  who filed to run for president in early September!

Another discussion - worthy of it's own post, will be the future of desktop/endpoint security since pundits' views on this cross the spectrum as to the solution's viability.

Wednesday, January 29, 2014

OPSWAT Market Share Analysis of Antivirus, Public File Sharing and Threat Detection - January 2014



 


San Francisco based software company OPSWAT has released their January 2014 Market Share Analysis of Antivirus, Public File Sharing and Threat Detection.

The top 5 vendors on the OPSWAT report were (Vendor market share) 

  1. 23.0% - Microsoft
  2. 15.9% - Avast
  3. 8.9% - AVG
  4. 8.1% - ESET
  5. 8.0% - Symantec

One interesting product that differs from the others are the offerings from Malwarebytes.  OPSWAT found that Among Malwarebytes users (4.2% share), more than 93% have another product installed, compared to 24% of users of other products.  This indicates that Malwarebytes Anti-Malware and Malwarebytes Anti-Malware Pro are largely used as supplemental products to add additional security to a protected device.  All devices in this data set have at least one antivirus product installed.
 

Using their GEAR technology, OPSWAT looked at detected threats on the endpoint that had AV installed and found that 4.7% had over 10 perceived threats. “The new section in this report that focuses on perceived threats detected by the installed antivirus software provides interesting new data about how actively antivirus products are protecting users, commented OPSWAT employee Alec Stokes. "We’re excited to dive more into this analysis in future reports.”

Other statistics contained within the report include (and more):
 
  • Public file sharing files installed
  • Hard drive usage
  • Operating systems share

 

OPSWAT’s many reports are available at http://www.opswat.com/about/media/reports

OPSWAT has a number of “paid products” as well as a free app remover utility.

About OPSWAT

OPSWAT is a San Francisco based software company that provides solutions to secure and manage IT infrastructure.  Founded in 2002, OPSWAT delivers solutions that provide manageability of endpoints and networks, and that help organizations protect against zero day attacks by using multiple antivirus engines scanning and file filtering.  OPSWAT’s intuitive applications and comprehensive development kits are deployed by SMB, enterprise, and OEM customers to more than ­million endpoints worldwide.  www.opswat.com


 

Monday, February 04, 2013

AVG Technologies - IPO One Year Birthday. Growth Curve or Ski Slope for 2013? Forbes versus Seeking Alpha Contributors



AVG Technologies has now been public for a year.  Their IPO (Initial Public Offering) took place in early February, 2012,  The stock   closed around $13.08 on its opening day last February  on Nasdaq  after targeting an opening day price at $16 plus.   The stock closed  on February 2, 2013  at  $13.14.  These two figures represent a one-year return of 0.38% excluding transaction costs and any dividends paid.  For the first 9 months of their fiscal year, AVG Technologies  revenue was up, but net income was down (not good as a trend).   Over the course of the year, AVG had a low of $9.42 and in December, had a high of $16.38. They have toolbar  deals with both Google and Yahoo.

 A Motley Fool Perspective - February

One worries about the thoroughness of AVG's protection, however, when one sees they've not been very thorough in safeguarding their finances. Current ratio is a quick-and-easy indicator of a stock's health, especially for a smaller company such as AVG which may lack the resources to bail itself out in the long term. With a current ratio of 0.7, AVG is struggling.
But T.M., you might say, AVG could be using its profits to expand, research, etc. etc. Their declining margins,  however, tell another tale: one of a company whose long-term solvency and profitability is in doubt.

 http://beta.fool.com/tmloyd/2013/02/11/world-wide-web-investment-here-today-gone-tomorrow/23612/?ticker=AVG

So what do Forbes contributor Jim Oberweis and Seeking Alpha contributor Eiad Asbahi see for the company? 

3 Slow Growth Small-Caps with Big Potential – Forbes 

Forbes’ numbers are inaccurate in the article.  AVG Technologies has more than 110 million computer users.  While they have been losing share, according to Opswat, they claim an active user base of 143 million users.  Some of this is attributable to 25 million copies of their Internet Security Suite (the paid) product given to purchasers of Huawei (Yes, that Huawei) mobile devices, in India.  

Forbes contributor Jim Oberweis likes AVG for the company’s PEG ratio, growth prospects, and the fact that the free product received a PC Magazine Editor’s choice award.  He likes the Google relationship. See links at the bottom of this blog for relative rankings of the paid AVG Antivirus and AVG Internet Security  solutions. The print article will be in the February 11 issue.
 

AVG: Feb 1st Google Policy Updates Threaten AVG's Growth Engine, Signals Steep Downside

In a  January 31 Seeking Alpha article,  Seeking Alpha contributor Eiad Asbahi is forecasting a share price of $8.50 to $10 per share (elsewhere in the analysis, the figures are $7.30 to $10.28).  This is based on an extensive quantitative analysis based on a supposed change that will be occurring in Google’s toolbar policy.   

According to the article, “Google (GOOG), AVG's primary search partner and currently the source of substantially all of AVG's Platform-derived revenue, is on the verge of announcing an update to its toolbar policy, something that has not been widely followed or discussed by market participants.”  This would require companies to make use of “opt-out” instead of having “opt-in” checked automatically on the customer’s behalf.  Opt-in has been a point of consternation among many users of many software packages.

In the article, he mentions Yahoo CEO Marissa Mayer was asked about this policy change.  Her response,   "On the Toolbar change from Google, we'd be remiss to offer comment on another company's product, so I'm not going to comment further there.”  AVG Technologies has a toolbar  agreement with Yahoo as well as Google. Previously, they had been exclusively one company or the other.

Asbahi did some number crunching based on different churn rates for users prior to and after February 1, 2012, an opt-in rate of 65% and per user revenue from Yahoo search bar users at 50% of Google tool bar users.  After all of his number crunching,  his estimates for AVG Technologies 2013 revenue to be between $248M and $287M,  an “ implied market capitalization and target price would between $399M and $569M, or $7.34/share and $10.28/share respectively.” On CNETs download site, AVG averages around a million downloads a week, suggesting major churn.

From a November 1 Financial Times blog,  “J R Smith, chief executive of AVG, admits that being the first in the industry to offer free products has “kind of put us a little bit in a box”, but slowly the company is succeeding in convincing investors that AVG has evolved from offering just hardcore security into other services and platforms”  http://blogs.ft.com/beyond-brics/2012/11/01/corporate-watch-avg-breaks-out

AVG made a buy versus make decision regarding mobile security in November 2010 with a $4.1 million acquisition of Droidsecurity to gain entry into mobile security market. 

AVG Technologies should be reporting their earnings on February 21.    
    
For some comparative reviews of paid antivirus and internet security products by PC Magazine, go to:

 
About OPSWAT www.opswat.com    

Founded in 2002, OPSWAT is the industry leader in software management SDKs, interoperability certification, and multiple-engine scanning solutions.

OPSWAT market share reports are available at http://www.opswat.com/media/reports    


Friday, December 14, 2012

OPSWAT Market Share Report - Antivirus Market Analysis: December 2012


OPSWAT Inc. has released their December 2012 market share report, “Antivirus Market Analysis: December 2012”.  The data OPSWAT used for this market share report was collected between November 16, 2011 and November 15, 2012.  It's worthwhile to check out the detailed report.  You can also learn more about OPSWAT, their reports, products and some free tools they have available.  (To be discussed on another blog).  One aspect of this market share report is that it doesn’t go into the market shares these vendors have on tablets (and smart phones).  This will become increasingly more relevant in 2013.   

A Global Analysis

Avast has to be happy.  They’re the global market share leader, though Microsoft is catching up.  They maintain nice leads over the other well-known freemium antivirus vendors, Avira and AVG Technologies.  AVG Technologies may not care as much since their    revenue stream  from Google and Yahoo will become increasingly more important (a separate discussion).  In some respects, the below isn’t great for Kaspersky since one of their corporate objectives is to surpass Trend Micro in total revenues. 

OPSWAT Market Share Report Top Five  

The Top Five in antivirus vendor market share were Avast (17.5%), Microsoft (16.8%), ESET (10.8%), Symantec (10.5%), and Avira (10.4%).     

Congratulations to the Top Five!  Largest market share loss, AVG Technologies at 1.3%.  AVG has been getting a lot of downloads of their free  (and paid) products running on Android, however.   This product came from their acquisition of DroidSecurity.  DroidSecurity (was first and the market leader)  had over 2.5 million downloads of their products prior to the 2010 acquisition. Avira, Avast, and Norton also offer free Android solutions.




 



















You can click on the above to enlarge it.

In the September report, the order of the Top Five vendors:  Avast, Microsoft, Avira, and AVG Technologies.

Avast had cancelled an IPO in late July.  You have to wonder when that will take place.  http://kensek.blogspot.com/2012/07/avast-to-have-their-initial-public.html


A North America Centric View

Microsoft has a pretty incredible 32.0% share, gaining 10%.  The others in the Top Five in order, Symantec, Avast, AVG Technologies, and ESET.  Largest loss, AVG Technologies at 1.7%.  Symantec and Avast achieved small gains in share of 0.6% and 0.8%, respectively.  Microsoft has quickly become the 800-pound gorilla in Antivirus and Free Antivirus marketshare.

























You can click on the above to enlarge it.


But How Well Do These Products Perform in third Party Testing?

That’s always an important question.  In AV-Comparatives September Anti-Virus Comparative “File Detection Test of Malicious Software”, the top five products overall were from,  in order Avira, Trend Micro, F-Secure, Kaspersky, and Bitdefender.  ESET was 15th, Microsoft was 17th .Symantec hasn’t been part of 2012 testing (they wanted to pick and choose tests to participate in. )

 http://kensek.blogspot.com/2012/10/av-comparatives-file-detection-test-of.html

All of the December top five with the exception of Microsoft (didn’t participate) received October VB100 Awards.  http://www.virusbtn.com/vb100/archive/summary
 
What about Correlation with 3rd Party Real World Dynamic Testing?

The short answer, there’s no correlation.  From the  December AV-Comparatives “Whole Product Dynamic ‘Real World’ Protection Test",  Avira (8th) Avast (9th) and ESET (11th), all received two stars, while BitDefender, G Data, Qihoo, Kaspersky and BullGuard all received three stars.

An issue for all these products is product churn.  Free competitive upgrades are often available.  With free products, switching costs to another free product is zero.  On www.download.com at CNET, Avast had 1.39 million downloads for the week  ending December 9, while AVG had 0.97 million downloads.  Annualizing these come to about 52 million downloads each. Major churn "has" to be occurring, or a product is downloaded to fix a problem an already installed product missed, and then removed.   


About OPSWAT www.opswat.com   

Founded in 2002, OPSWAT is the industry leader in software management SDKs, interoperability certification, and multiple-engine scanning solutions.

OPSWAT market share reports are available at http://www.opswat.com/media/reports   

About AV-Comparatives.org   

AV-Comparatives is an Austrian Non-Profit-Organization, which provides independent Anti-Virus software tests free to the public.  www.av-comparatives.org
 

Tuesday, September 11, 2012

September 2012 OPSWAT Report on Worldwide Security Industry Market Share Analysis

OPSWAT Inc. has released their September 2012 report, “Security Industry Market Share Analysis”.  The data OPSWAT used was collected between August 16, 2011 and August 15, 2012.  It's worthwhile to check out the detailed report.  You can also learn more about OPSWAT, their reports, products and some free tools they have available.


There were some  changes in the order of the top five in the September Market Share Analysis.  Avira regained a position in the top five while AVG Technologies dropped out.  Globally, over the last six months, AVG Technologies had the largest loss in market share with about 1.4% (note, a company can gain in seats and still lose market share), and Avira the largest gain, with just fewer than 2%.  A couple of nice graphics illustrate market share and gain/loss for both the Global and North Americamarkets.  The detailed report has a listing of the top 10.  These top 10 have 89% of the market, according to OPSWAT.

Antivirus Worldwide Vendor Market Share September – OPSWAT
  1. 17.5% - Avast
  2. 13.9% - Microsoft
  3. 12.1% - Avira
  4. 10.6% - Eset
  5. 10.2% - AVG Technologies
Antivirus Worldwide Vendor Market Share June 2012 - OPSWAT
  1. 17.4% - Avast
  2. 13.2% - Microsoft
  3. 11.1% - Eset
  4. 10.3% - Symantec
  5. 10.1% - AVG Technologies

AV Products Worldwide Market Share

Avast and Microsoft were first and second with respect to global market share with 13.8% and 13.6%, respectively.  Avira was 3rd with 10%.  As with the other lists, OPWSWAT lists the top ten.  The top ten had 81% of the market.

North America Vendor Share

Microsoft led   the other vendors    with respect to market share at 26.7%.  Symantec was second at 15.7% and Avast 3rd at 11.1%.  The top 10 vendors have 89.5% of the market in North America.

There has to be a story behind Avast cancelling their initial public offering since they continue to be in a leading position among the three A’s, AVG Technologies, Avast, and Avira,  when it comes to market share.  Note that this is defined as installed base, not revenue. 

The cone of shame for that timeframe from the bottom up was from Ahnlab, Webroot, and PC Tools.
The major players are in the process of running out their Antivirus 2013 and Internet Security 2013 suites.  Depending on how these are received, the order may be changing over time.

Antivirus Usage, Real Time Protection, System Scan and Updates

Opswat also provides some interesting data on the major vendors from the perspective of – percentage of those with Real Time Protection (RTP) enabled (Microsoft Wins), Average Time since Last Definition Update (Microsoft) and Average Time since Last Full System Scan (Microsoft).  Where this data is somewhat funky is that users can define when they want a full system scan, for example. 

But Wait, There’s More!  Operating Systems Share

Windows 7 has 51.9% of the worldwide market, and 46.6% of the North America Market.  See the report.  Windows XP is just under 39% in both cases. 

But Wait, There’s More!  OPSWAT Products

Read the report for blurbs on the OESIS Framwork, AppRemover, Multi-Scanning solutions, the GEARS cloud-based endpoint management and monitoring solution, and the Secure Virtual Desktop (SVD).

AV¬-Comparative Testing 

The market   share leaders aren’t always the top rated ones in testing.  From the AV-Comparative March through June 2012 report, “Whole Product Dynamic ‘Real World’ Protection Test, for example,  the top five products were from    BitDefender, G Data, Kaspersky Qihoo, and F-Secure.  The June through August online graphic has the order as Kaspersky, QiHoo, BitDefender, Avira, and F-Secure. 

About OPSWAT  www.opswat.com  

Founded in 2002, OPSWAT is the industry leader in software management SDKs, interoperability certification, and multiple-engine scanning solutions. 

OPSWAT market share reports are available at http://www.opswat.com/media/reports  

AV-Comparatives.org

AV-Comparatives is an Austrian Non-Profit-Organization, which provides independent Anti-Virus software tests free to the public.  www.av-comparatives.org