Yes, you can go remote with the Avira Online Essentials Dashboard, thanks to some help from TeamViewer.
The post Go remote with Avira Online Essentials Dashboard and TeamViewer appeared first on Avira Blog.
Yes, you can go remote with the Avira Online Essentials Dashboard, thanks to some help from TeamViewer.
The post Go remote with Avira Online Essentials Dashboard and TeamViewer appeared first on Avira Blog.
Avira Free Antivirus was recommended by Consumer Reports, the leading source of product reviews in America.
The post Consumer Reports recommends Avira appeared first on Avira Blog.
In the year of its 30th anniversary Avira is more super than ever!
The post Avira Antivirus 2016: Supersize your security appeared first on Avira Blog.
In Virus Lab, we work hand in hand with our support team in order to help them in the daily fight against the „dark side“. We see a lot of infections every day and often ask ourselves how all those user end up with so many unwanted application installed.
The post Free often has its price… appeared first on Avira Blog.
… and congratulate the Browser Name Contest winners!
The post Please Welcome Avira Scout … appeared first on Avira Blog.
An elderly man in Bratislava, Slovakia, now has a new Avira t-shirt – and he might not remember how he got it.
The post Avira Rainy Day Rescue appeared first on Avira Blog.
Remember the little contest we started some time ago concerning our new browser name? While we are not ready to announce the winners yet (we take the search for the right browser name very serious. Finding and going through the different candidates takes a lot of time, as does the involved research), I’m sure you are more than happy to get a sneak peak, right?
The post The Struggle For the Right Browser Name appeared first on Avira Blog.
Google added a cool feature to chrome. It is voice search. They just forgot to ask the users before doing so.
The post Google, Chromium, HotWord, and our Avira browser appeared first on Avira Blog.
The goal with the browser is to create an easy-to-use, secure and privacy respecting browser. These are the more advanced tactics we will be using:
Adding cloud features to file scanning was a large success. The detection quality of malicious files went straight up. Short:
On the client there is a behaviour detection kind of pre-selection. If a file is suspicious the cloud server is asked if the file is already known
If unknown:
We built incredible databases covering malicious files during the last years. We should have something similar for the browser and use our large knowledge base and server side classification tools for web threats as well.
It should look something like that:
To get there we will have to improve the signal-to-noise ratio. We are only interested in malicious pages. If the pre-selection in the browser is too aggressive and sends non-malicious pages to us, it‘s a waste of CPU cycles and bandwidth. With millions of users as a factor, even minor slips will be expensive and annoying for everyone involved.
We will also remove private data before sending it (we are not interested in user data. We are spying on malware). Personal data is actually toxic for us. Servers get hacked, databases stolen, companies gag-ordered. Not having that kind of data on our servers protects us as well as you. I mean just think of it: Some web pages have the user name in the URL (*/facepalm*). I do not think we can automatically detect and remove that trace of data though. But maybe we could shame the web pages into fixing it …*/think*
The parts in the source that collect the data and prepare them for sending are Open Source. Here I am asking you to NOT trust us and review the code!
I hope we find a simple solution to display the data being sent to us before sending. The only problem is that it could have a negative impact on your browsing experience. Having a modal dialog when you expect a page to load …
One option could be to at least offer a global configuration to switch cloud requests off (always, in incognito mode only, never) and show you in logs what got sent.
You want your own AV? Or protection technology in your Tetris game to make it unique? Just contact our SI department and make a deal.
Other companies have thousands of web-crawlers simulating user behavior to identify malware.
Millions of real Avira users are our scouts and sensors.
We need some branding. That would include Avira specific changes in the browser (names, logos, some other texts). But also links. This is not only relevant for brand-awareness but also to keep our users away from Chrome/Chromium support to avoid confusion (“Which Chrome version do you have ?” … listens … “we never released that, can you please click on “about and tell me the version number” … listen … “WTF?!?” => Confusion) and direct them to our support – who actually CAN help.
We will always improve the build process. There are compiler switches for features called Position Independent Executable (PIE), Fortify Source, etc. that we should enable on compilation (many are already enabled). Most time here will be spent on ensuring that they do not get disabled by accident, are enabled on all platforms, and do not slow down the browser. This task can start simple and suddenly spawn nasty side effects. This is why we need TestingTestingTesting.
Google added the Hotwords feature to Chromium and Chrome. It’s a nice feature. But it switches on the microphone and “spies” on the user (this is a convenience feature many users want). For our secure and privacy respecting browser this crossed a line though. This is the reason why we will have to verify that no “surprise !!!”-Extensions get installed by default. One more task for our testers that add verification tasks to the browser to handle our specific requirements. Keep in mind: Chrome and Chromium already have very good unit-tests and other automated test cases. We just need some extra paranoia. That’s the job for our testers in the team.
We will write blog posts covering all the features. The attacks they block, their weaknesses, what we did and will be doing to improve them. We will offer you a guided tour Down the Rabbit Hole. Go with us as far as you dare.
TL;DR:
There is so much we can do to improve the browser; without touching the core.
We reached the bottom of this specific Rabbit Hole.
Thorsten Sick
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The post Avira’s Secure Browser: Plans and Tactics (Part 2) appeared first on Avira Blog.
We were excited to welcome in Tettnang Beta testers from USA, Italy, Germany, Greece, China & Malaysia.
The members we invited to this workshop are the most active beta testers in our Antivirus for Windows Beta project and they were chosen based on the quality of their feedback and the number of forum posts or bug reports they provided.
Although they contribute to the Avira Beta Community out of their own interest, most of them are also our customers, making the information exchange even more interesting.
We offered the participants a detailed tour of the Avira Protection Lab, giving them the opportunity to meet the people behind our products. In order to provide them with a technical overview as well, our experts showed them how we are visualizing the digital threats in real time. They even had the chance to hear everything about our vision as company directly from our CEO, Travis Witteveen, and meet the company founder, Tjark Auerbach.
Throughout the workshop, most of the discussions were carried around the Avira products, the current threat landscape, but we also focused on global privacy and security topics.
We collected feedback from our guests and placed them under several categories of which Features, Usability, Product ideas and also Problems resolution were the most discussed ones.
While we were happy to discover that all participants agreed that the anti-malware technology used by Avira is one of the best in the world, they seem to think we still have some work to do to improve the product usability.
Considering the number of photos shared on social media, our guests seem to have enjoyed the Avira experience. As for us, we have our To Do list before the next Beta Testing Community Workshop we are looking forward to organize next year.
Thinking about joining the Avira Beta Testing Community? Click here to register now.
The post A Workshop with Avira Beta Community Members appeared first on Avira Blog.