First AV-Test certifications of 2011 published


22 products scored on multiple scales in quarterly test report.

Testing organization

AV-Test

has published its latest round of anti-malware certification tests, with 22 products rated on a wide range of factors.

17 of the 22 products were judged worthy of

AV-Test

‘s ‘Certified’ badge, with five not reaching the required standard in a suite of tests that measure products’ real-time protection capabilities, scanning detection rates, cleaning and disinfection, and impact on the protected system. Each of three main categories earns products up to six points, with a total of 11 required to earn a pass mark.

Leading the pack were

BitDefender

and

F-Secure

, with

Symantec

hot on their heels; all scored 15 or higher from a possible 18 points. Other high scorers included

G Data

,

Kaspersky

and

Panda

, with 14 points,

AVG

with 13.5, and

Sophos

with 13.

ESET

,

Trend Micro

and

Webroot

all put in a decent showing with 12.5 points, and

GFI

(formerly

Sunbelt

) was also safely past the cutoff with 12.

Avast

,

Avira

,

eScan

and

Microsoft

flew pretty close to the wind with 11.5 points, while

BullGuard

just scraped a pass with 11.

Products not awarded certification, in either this or the previous round of tests, came from

CA

,

Comodo

,

McAfee

and

Norman

, with

PC Tools

joining them at the low end of the list this month. The lowest scorers were

Norman

and

McAfee

, both with a lowly 8.5 points – less than half the possible tally. Both were let down by large numbers of false positives, particularly in the earlier part of the testing period.

Full details of the results, including individual reports for each product taking part in the test, can be found on the

AV-Test

website:

http://www.av-test.org/

. This latest batch of results rounds off a busy few weeks for testers, with

AV-Comparatives.org

also releasing

figures

this week, and the latest results of our own VB100 comparative, featuring the largest ever set of products, published in the current issue of

VB

. Subscribers can read the full issue

here

, while a summary of the results are available

here

.

Posted on 15 April 2011 by

Virus Bulletin


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