Microsoft Patents Proactive Virus Protection

Discussion in 'other anti-virus software' started by dan_maran, May 21, 2008.

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  1. dan_maran

    dan_maran Registered Member

  2. kinwolf

    kinwolf Registered Member

  3. Baz_kasp

    Baz_kasp Registered Member

    It's Microsoft...why would they question them? :)
     
  4. Diver

    Diver Registered Member

    The US patent system is broken. We have not heard the last of this one.
     
  5. Macstorm

    Macstorm Registered Member

    You have the ideas.... they have the money :D
     
  6. EASTER

    EASTER Registered Member

    Is this for Vista only? Or does it also included XP systems?
     
  7. emperordarius

    emperordarius Registered Member

    I'd rather say ProPassive protection.
     
  8. hurzelpurzel

    hurzelpurzel Registered Member

  9. mercurie

    mercurie A Friendly Creature

    Romanian College Students may be the next to throw eggs at MS executives. :D
     
  10. dan_maran

    dan_maran Registered Member

  11. Saraceno

    Saraceno Registered Member

    Who would have thought Microsoft could be so sneaky? :ninja: ;)
     
  12. Tweakie

    Tweakie Registered Member

    You cannot patent an idea, you can only patent an implementation of that idea. Microsoft knows it very well: they did not try to patent "proactive protection" in general and never claimed they invented it. What they did is to patent a particular implementation of a virtual environment for monitoring the behavior of unknown executables on the windows platform. And in order to do so they provide some details concerning the internal workings of their system, something that have been missed in the blog message cited by the original poster.

    For those interested, the text of the patent is here

    Now, there exists plenty of other patents on that particular theme (including older ones). And the implementation described is probably not very different from what can be found in some other antivirus software.

    What I find confusing in Microsoft's patent is that they initially describe their invention as a "variant detector" and finally describe the implementation of something that could be a "generic heuristic" system (insisting on the fact that they focus on "interesting APIs"). For a simple variant detection approach I believe the kind of approach I described this message, that seems really close to what they are doing, would have been more efficient.
     
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