MRG Flash Tests 2011

Discussion in 'other anti-virus software' started by LODBROK, Jan 27, 2011.

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  1. Sevens

    Sevens Guest

    MRG Flash Test 18/10/2011
     
  2. Thankful

    Thankful Savings Monitor

  3. Osaban

    Osaban Registered Member

    Yes, I can. Useless things can also be very interesting:
    http://web.singnet.com.sg/~dsnake1/tus_funenglishD.html
    Have fun!
     
  4. ReverseGear

    ReverseGear Guest

    We can compare other products with useless product X and say oh atleast its better than X :rolleyes: :shifty:
     
  5. BoerenkoolMetWorst

    BoerenkoolMetWorst Registered Member

    Too many passes lately, we need some tougher samples :D
     
  6. Thankful

    Thankful Savings Monitor

  7. Page42

    Page42 Registered Member

    Ha ha. Yes, but I'm sure and I'm safe in concluding that not every application needs tougher samples! ;)
     
  8. Noob

    Noob Registered Member

    Woah, Malwarebytes failed 2 in a single test? :eek:
     
  9. Thankful

    Thankful Savings Monitor

    As did Webroot Secure Anywhere.
     
  10. TonyW

    TonyW Registered Member

    As did 3 others. If you're going to single out products that fail two or more times, you should really consider the others that also fail the equivalent number of times, not just the one or two.

    There were 3 products that even failed just the once, and those were all top tier anti-malware programs.

    What's the betting that if the test was to be done again now those same products pass the test [because of updated databases]? This brings us to the point that under certain conditions, some products aren't going to pass each and every time. If all modules are used and at optimum settings, I wonder how many actually fare better. [I'm not talking about updated signatures here.]
     
  11. Page42

    Page42 Registered Member

    Man, I would love to see the tests repeated... just to see if the vendors actually try to improve where they failed. I am not so sure that, given a 2nd chance, the FAILS would turn into PASSES.
     
  12. 1chaoticadult

    1chaoticadult Registered Member

    Oh no run for the hills :D
     
  13. Thankful

    Thankful Savings Monitor

    That's the point of zero day testing. Updating protection after the fact, is too late.
    You're already infected.
     
  14. Sevens

    Sevens Guest

    The bottom line is there is new stuff out already, would they catch that? Any one of them should catch it after they been called on it. It is easier to put in perspective if you look at it as a average user ,I have the money to invest in one security security program and I'm going to have to live with it for a year or when the key runs out then certain programs come to the top and there is surprise when the have a couple fails in the same test, it's out of character. Contrary to new world thinking, nobody has to give equal time to something they have no faith in. No matter if its fact or opinion. Its what works for you or what you think works for you. It's not rocket science or there would be alot of computer rooms around hear with the roof blown off!
     
  15. steve1955

    steve1955 Registered Member

    That all depends on how widespread a "new piece malware" becomes before the vendors issue updates to combat it AND also depends on users browsing habits:-these type tests can introduce a bit of paranoia into the mix:-how many of you have ever been infected in the real world with anything that can be classed as "zero day"?Most infections(not all) are caused by user stupidity,for example turning off their AV protection to download a file they know or suspect may be "dodgy"
     
  16. TonyW

    TonyW Registered Member

    And therein lies the challenge for anti-malware companies: to detect something that has never been seen before. I don't envy the task they face; it truly is a cat-and-mouse game. There are going to be times when one or more products fail these sort of tests given the conditions that the testers employ.

    The other problem is by the time some form of detection is added, the zero-day threat no longer exists for a number of reasons, including URLs changing [especially the fast-fluxing ones], files getting removed/tweaked etc.

    It is a malware headache, and great respect goes to the guys [& gals!] in the anti-malware industry for doing the best they can in such an ever-changing climate. :)
     
  17. CloneRanger

    CloneRanger Registered Member

    Once again, Zemana passes with flying colours :) :thumb:
     
  18. Noob

    Noob Registered Member

    Guys i think you are misinterpreting me :D
    I know no product is perfect but it is RARE for Malwarebytes to miss one let alone two in these tests, or am i wrong? ;)
    Yeah, anything can happen and a few miss are nothing :D
     
  19. 1chaoticadult

    1chaoticadult Registered Member

    I personally didn't misinterpret you at all. :D
     
  20. Page42

    Page42 Registered Member

    Neither did I. :)
     
  21. LODBROK

    LODBROK Guest

    Very much like old world thinking: life is a craps shoot, then you die. :cool:

    (Craps = a game in which two dice are thrown.)
     
  22. Sevens

    Sevens Guest

    And nobody crys foul!:)
     
  23. J_L

    J_L Registered Member

    "Ignorance is bliss", and I'm glad Page42 is not like that.

    Anyhow, the DefenseWall dominance continues, which is not surprising considering it's the only product of its kind there.
     
  24. chabbo

    chabbo Registered Member

    Tibia is a game. and its an malware too?

    or what why they test tibia?
     
  25. andyman35

    andyman35 Registered Member

    Very good point.
    It's actually rather difficult to become infected ,0day or not,unless you're so desperate to see that XXX-rated Jessica Alba clip that you just go ahead and install that "required codec" regardless.

    Perhaps MRG should post a stupidity rating for the missed samples.
     
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