Symantec hopes to deliver anti-virus online

Symantec will slowly move towards supplying its consumer applications -- such as Norton Antivirus and Norton Utilities -- as a service.

At a roundtable discussion in Sydney this morning, David Sykes, vice president of Symantec in the Pacific Region, explained that as broadband becomes ubiquitous and consumers get used to purchasing software online instead of in a box, security services -- and even PC utilities such a disk defragmenter -- could be sold as a service.

According to Sykes, this is already happening in countries such as Korea where ISPs are reselling applications on behalf of security companies such as Symantec.

"The ISP licenses our product and delivers the service -- they do the scanning, disk fragmenting and other stuff that Norton SystemWorks does -- and they deliver that down the pipe," said Sykes.

Sykes also said there was the possibility that tiny pieces of an application or a single virus scan could be resold by organisations such as online banks, which may choose to ensure their customers are not infected with a virus or spyware before they log on to their account.

"The customer goes to an Internet banking site and that site has an end-point appliance that scans [their computer]. It may say 'you have Sobig [or another infection]' and up will pop the anti-virus vendor's window that says 'do you want to fix this problem or buy a solution'," said Sykes.

This could be paid for by the customer using their credit card or by adding it to their mobile phone bill by sending a text message, said Sykes, who warned that banks could decide not to provide access to anyone with an infected computer.

"If you don't use the service then you may not be able to log onto the Internet banking site," he added.

Reducing the footprint of Norton AntiVirus
Symantec executives have in the past admitted that customers often complain about the size and resources used by its consumer applications such as Norton Antivirus and Norton Internet Security.

Last year, Mark Kennedy, architect, product delivery and response at Symantec told ZDNet Australia that the company would respond to customer feedback by making its flagship consumer product smaller and faster.

"The footprint of the product and the performance of the product is something that the consumer team is actively working on," said Kennedy at the time.

By delivering security features such as virus scanning online, Sykes believes the footprint of its applications will no longer be an issue: "Once you move to the service situation then the footprint becomes almost irrelevant."

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Talkback 4 comments

    as a Anonymous -- 09/12/05 (in reply to #120124728)

    RealTime protection already runs as a service on Windows.

    I don't see how having your bank's website scan your machine is going to solve any problems. You're still going to want a RealTime protection component of some sort running on your actual desktop machine. How does this solve the footprint/bloat issue?

    Symantec anti virus exploitation Anonymous -- 09/12/05

    Symantec just lost me as a customer. They have arbitarily decommited VET from supporting Microsoft servers.

    I've used VET on my server probably as long as they've been in business and it's a very good product.

    Since it was sold to Symantec, big business has taken over from very competant technical people.

    They've just decided anyone who has a server rather than a workstation must be a rich business.

    So they expect me to pay $360 pa. and change to another product when I'm perfectly satified with VET on our servers and pay $65 p.a.

    I just hope lots of other small businesses drop them too and move to AVG - which is free.

    Go Jump Andrew -- 09/12/05

    The day you need a net connection just to scan a file on a computer is the day you should look for a new AV program, what happens if your out the back of nowhere and get a file from someones memory stick, sorry can'nt take your file on AV program active. Dumb, AV systems need to be installed and run on the computer that they are to protect.

    Paying for online scanning Anonymous -- 10/12/05

    Mr Sykes is kidding himself if he thinks bank customers will pay for the privilege of having their computer scanned for viruses on-line just so you can log onto a bank website, especially if you are already using anti-virus software and using a firewall. Australians already hate the fees & charges the Big 4 banks charge to use their products.
    Any attempts to charge more will get a big NO and any company advocating such charges such as Symantec will also lose customers from the backlash.

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