Digital Home Advisor

Windows Vista more secure than XP, says security company
But its edge is little more than half what Microsoft claims, says PC Tools
Gregg Keizer (Computerworld) 12/05/2008 08:49:17

iPhone Centre
iPhone CentreFind out all about the iPhone at our iPhone Centre. News, reviews, how-tos and video - all in one location.
  • +

    Researcher warns of unpatched iPhone bugs 24/07/2008 08:25:23

    Flaws in Mail and Safari could be used by phishers and spammers, browser expert says
    Security vulnerabilities in the iPhone's e-mail application and Safari Web browser can be used by phishers to dupe users into visiting malicious sites or by spammers to flood the phone's inbox with junk mail, a researcher warned Wednesday.
  • +

    Is the iPhone dev deal fair? 24/07/2008 10:42:39

    Apple apparently chose the best possible template for its iPhone developer programs: its own Apple Developer Connection for OS X. Why it then made the iPhone SDK confidential even for those who download it for free poses a puzzling contradiction in the company's seemingly open approach to development.
  • +

    5 ways the iPhone 3G still lags in enterprise 24/07/2008 09:45:34

    The iPhone 3G may have a lock on the Sexiest Gadget Alive title for 2008, but in the frumpy and boring world of things that matter to enterprise IT managers, it's no pinup.
Additional Resources

Newsletter Subscription

Sign up for our Good Gear Guide newsletters!
Each day the GearDaily Newsletter covers the latest from the last week in a specific category. Monday is "Computing, Small Office and Home Office", Tuesday is "On the Move", Wednesday is "Digital Cameras, Video and Imaging", Thursday is "Mobile Phones and Communications" and Friday is "Home Entertainment".
See the latest products and comparison prices added to GearShop each week.
The GoodGearGuide portfolio of services is rapidly expanding. By joining this list you will be pre-registered for any new email services we launch so you won't miss out on any of our independent product guidance and purchasing information. You will be automatically subscribed and receive the new service(s) but dont worry, should you wish to unsubscribe you can do so with only one click.

Microsoft's Windows Vista is 37 per cent more secure than its Windows XP ancestor, a security vendor claimed Friday, a rate it hinted was disappointing.

Using different data collection techniques, Microsoft has recently asserted that Vista is 60% more secure than XP.

For every 1,000 machines running Vista, security company PC Tools counted 639 unique threats over a six-month period, said Michael Greene, the firm's vice president of product strategy, on Friday. "A threat is actually when [malicious code] has penetrated the machine," Greene said. "The malware has to be on the machine to be counted by our ThreatFire community."

Vista's number is lower than the one for Windows XP. Users of PC Tool's ThreatFire behavioral-based anti-malware software who run the nearly-seven-year-old XP reported 1,021 unique threats per 1,000 machines in the same six-month period.

"We wanted to find out how bulletproof Vista was," said Greene, noting that Microsoft has claimed Vista is significantly more secure than its predecessors. "The answer is that it is more secure than XP, but not so secure that you can give up on anti-virus and other security software."

Ironically, the even older Windows 2000 is much more secure, by PC Tools' statistics, than Windows XP or Vista; ThreatFire users reported just 586 unique incidents of penetrated PCs per 1,000 machines during the six-month span.

But Greene essentially dismissed that number, or at least direct comparisons with XP or Vista. "It's a matter of what people are using as desktop machines," he said, adding that since ThreatFire targets consumers and Windows 2000 is rarely run as a desktop client outside of businesses, the unique-threat-per-1,000 doesn't necessarily mean that the old OS was more secure.

Overall, Greene was disappointed in the stats for Windows. "I didn't think the situation would be this bad in general," he said, adding that Microsoft's claims that Vista is substantially more secure than XP doesn't jibe with the ThreatFire numbers.

"I don't think Vista is really any more secure than XP," he said. "People still need to practice safe computing and need to have good security software, and keep their machines patched and up-to-date."

Microsoft, however, has recently claimed that Vista is more secure than XP, and by a greater margin than what Greene and PC Tools allege. According to data collected during cleansing operations of the Malicious Software Removal Tool (MSRT), software that Microsoft updates monthly and feeds automatically to most Windows users, 60 per cent fewer Vista machines were infected by a recognizable piece of malware than PCs running XP during the second half of 2007.

Microsoft summarized its MSRT data in a security report published about three weeks ago. The report's key findings, as well as the full report, can be downloaded from Microsoft's site.

Market Place

Good Gear Guide Member Login

 
close
Hot Deals
Sponsored Links