More than one quarter of the security products submitted for the recent Virus Bulletin VB100 antimalware tests failed to post a passing score.
The security publication said that the June edition of its test pitted vendors against malware samples collected for Windows Server 2008 R2. Products are tested and graded both for detecting known pieces of malware and reporting back 'false positive' results on uninfected files.
In the June edition of the test, the company found that of the 33 products which underwent the test, nine failed to register passing grades. Among the products which failed the test were offerings from Norman, eEye, bkis and Frisk.
Products from Digital Defender and Virusfighter also failed to earn certification in the test.
In general, the testers found that in general the products tested were found to perform unreliably when applied to Windows Server 2008.
"Such unreliability is particularly significant on a server platform, where administrators require absolute trustworthiness and total trackability of all activities," said Virus Bulletin director of testing John Hawes.
"A product demonstrating the sort of flaky behaviour we have seen in our tests this month would cause major headaches for an administrator."
VB100 test blasts Windows Server security vendors
By
Shaun Nichols
on Jun 8, 2010 12:20PM

Got a news tip for our journalists? Share it with us anonymously here.
Partner Content

Channel can help lead customers to boosting workplace wellbeing with professional headsets

Build cybersecurity capability with award winning Fortinet training from Ingram Micro

How NinjaOne Is Supporting The Channel As It Builds An Innovative Global Partner Program

Tech For Good program gives purpose and strong business outcomes
Ingram Micro Ushers in the Age of Ultra
Sponsored Whitepapers
-1.jpg&w=100&c=1&s=0)
Stop Fraud Before It Starts: A Must-Read Guide for Safer Customer Communications

The Cybersecurity Playbook for Partners in Asia Pacific and Japan

Pulseway Essential Eight Framework

7 Best Practices For Implementing Human Risk Management

2025 State of Machine Identity Security Report