Product Review
Review Provided by : PCAuthority
BitDefender has always been good value for money, and
it’s clear from the outset that Internet Security 10
continues the trend. A single licence allows installation on
two separate machines and runs for two years. This works out
to $30 per machine, per year, which means considerable
savings over competing products. You can also knock another
$16 off the cost by opting not to download the bootable
rescue CD, which uses a Linux installation and brings the
ability to analyse, repair or disinfect a system. But money
isn’t everything, especially when it comes to security.
Stepping up to meet the latest challenges, BitDefender now
ships with a rootkit detector, which scans your computer for
hidden dangers before installing the security suite itself.
Once installed, a predefined rule set for the firewall
component means there are far fewer annoying pop-ups to deal
with: the firewall doesn’t keep asking if you really want to
allow an application access. It doesn’t cover everything,
but it does cut down dramatically on initial configuration
time.
Unfortunately, we were troubled by the need to keep running
the Network Profile Configuration wizard. This appears to be
connected to BitDefender upgrades, and at one point we were
asked to configure the network, reboot and upon rebooting
configure it again. Such interruptions are a major flaw and
go against the move towards silent running within the
firewall industry.
We were more impressed by the firewall itself, beefed up by
the tweaking of the old HiVE (Heuristics in Virtual
Environment) system, which has become B-HAVE (Behavioural
Heuristic Analyzer in Virtual Environments). More than just
a different acronym, the proactive detection system creates
a virtual computer environment within which suspect
processes are executed safely to check for potential malware
where signatures have not yet been released.
Virus protection is equally impressive, covering all bases
including peer-to-peer and Instant Message applications,
with no extra configuration required to protect key areas,
such as incoming and outgoing email. With an ability to
filter Web traffic in realtime, and a new privacy guard to
monitor all HTTP and SMTP traffic leaving your computer,
it’s also possible to add user-defined strings such as
password fragments to prevent them being intercepted.
Happily, BitDefender sailed through our firewall and virus
testing procedures.
The same can’t be said for the anti-spam or anti-spyware
components. Despite the seven filters to refine email
anti-spam controls, and the adaptive engines to respond to
new spamming techniques, we were less than impressed. The
false-positive rate remained too high at seven percent after
a week of training. Compared to even Outlook’s spam filter,
or the third-party service from Cloudmark, there’s no
comparison. Equally, when it comes to spyware protection,
we’d advise sticking with Spy Sweeper. BitDefender does have
the rootkit detector module, which worked well, but
keylogger detection was less polished, and it failed to
identify, remove or block any of the threats during our test
runs.
Parental controls, however, have been improved by adding
heuristic classification and blocking of inappropriate Web
content and email, with keyword filtering as a secondary
filtration layer. Predefined profiles based on user age can
be used, as can a time-interval-based access blocking
system. Finally, it’s possible to limit access to specific
application types such as games or IM software – an
impressive showing.
Thanks to hourly updates, the typical update volume is only
about 100Kb, so it flies by without much impact. But the
same can’t be said of application start-up times: with
BitDefender installed, you’ll see a slowdown in how long it
takes for your day-to-day applications to execute. Firefox,
for example, took over twice as long to get started.
So, while BitDefender has moved on, it still feels like a
work in progress when compared to the market-leading
security suites, with ZoneAlarm’s Internet Security Suite
2006 (see A-List) remaining our favourite.

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