Help - Search - Members - Calendar
Full Version: MS Morro AV - Beta release coming
Gladiator Security Forum > Microsoft Corner > News and Information about Microsoft
Chachazz
"Microsoft is getting ready to offer Windows users a free antivirus product (code name Morro)."

"Microsoft says Morro will be released as a public beta "soon." "

"Morro will work by routing all of a users Internet traffic to a Microsoft datacenter, where the Morro application will process the traffic and identify and block malware in real time, by examining all of the rerouted traffic.
  • Will Morro remain free forever?
  • What user information will Microsoft gather with a Morro service?
  • Will the service still protect when a user is not connected to the web?
  • Will Microsoft keep the service as up to date as competing products?
  • Will Morro be available for all Microsoft OSes?
  • Will Morro noticeably impact performance?
"
Full article: PC World

TheSentinel
QUOTE
Microsoft's free antivirus coming soon
Good Morro to you

Reuters

Published: 11 June 2009 09:06 BST

Microsoft is getting ready to unveil a long-anticipated free antivirus service for personal computers that will compete with products sold by Symantec and McAfee.
A Microsoft spokesman said on Wednesday that the software maker is testing an early version of the product with its own employees. Microsoft would "soon" make a trial version, or product beta, available via its website, he added, but declined to provide a specific date.

More:
http://hardware.silicon.com/desktops/0,390...39440827,00.htm
Chachazz
Microsoft Security Essentials (code name Morro)
A good preview with screenshots and info at ars technica:
http://arstechnica.com/microsoft/news/2009...ename-morro.ars
Terryala
Microsoft to deliver free antimalware next Tuesday

QUOTE
Will deny beta of Microsoft Security Essentials, formerly 'Morro,' to users running counterfeit Windows

By Gregg Keizer
June 18, 2009 04:03 PM ET

Computerworld - Microsoft Corp. today said it will release a public beta of its free antimalware software, now called Microsoft Security Essentials, formerly "Morro," next Tuesday for Windows XP, Vista and Windows 7.

Although Microsoft was vague about a final ship date -- saying only that it would wrap up sometime this year -- it was crystal clear that it will deny the program to PCs running counterfeit copies of Windows.

Microsoft pitched Security Essentials as a basic antivirus, antispyware program that boasts a simplistic interface and consumes less memory and disk space than commercial security suites like those from vendors such as Symantec Corp. and McAfee Inc.

"This is security you can trust," said Alan Packer, general manager of Microsoft's antimalware team, when asked to define how it differs from rivals, both free and not. "And it's easy to get and easy to use."

He stressed the Security Essentials' real-time protection over its scanning functions, which are both integral to any security software worth its weight. "Rather than scan and clean, which it also does, it's trying to keep you from being infected in the first place," Packer said.

One of its most interesting features is what Microsoft calls "Dynamic Signature Service," a back-and-forth communications link between a Security Essentials-equipped PC and Microsoft's servers.

If Security Essentials detects something suspicious, whether code or behavior, but can't pin either to a specific piece of malware, the software "phones home" to Microsoft servers to relay a short burst of information.

"If it sees something new, like a new binary, the client queries the back end," Packer said. "The server can then ask for a sample, which the client sends as a hash." At that point, if Microsoft has created a signature for the threat, that signature is immediately pushed to the PC. Security Essentials will ask the user's permission before sending a sample, Packer noted.

Security Essentials is the first Microsoft antimalware product to use Dynamic Signature, and the feature will be added early next year to the enterprise-grade Forefront line. "We actually identify [the things that trigger a 'phone home'] fairly loosely," Packer said. "We have a list of known good software, of course, but outside that, if a program is doing things like hooking Autostart points in the registry, or trying to kill other processes, Essential will query the servers."

Normally, signature updates are sent to Security Essentials daily via the Microsoft Update service, a superset of the better-known Windows Update.

In late 2008, this software, then codenamed "Morro," was described as the replacement for Windows Live OneCare, the for-a-fee security software that will be put to pasture at the end of this month. OneCare was never able to gain more than a toehold in the consumer security software market.


Continued

http://www.computerworld.com/action/articl...p;intsrc=kc_top
This is a "lo-fi" version of our main content. To view the full version with more information, formatting and images, please click here.
Invision Power Board © 2001-2009 Invision Power Services, Inc.