CA Internet Security Suite 2007

By Robert Vamosi on 05 March 2007

CA Internet Security Suite 2007 feels like a pasted-together trial version of what CA offers in terms of consumer protection. The suite fails to integrate and lacks antiphishing, antirootkit, and basic IM protection found elsewhere.

5.3 3.1
  • Good: Includes a personal firewall and antivirus, antispyware, and antispam protection • Runs under Windows 98 through Windows Vista • Supports up to three PCs under one licence
  • Bad: Does not include antiphishing and antirootkit protection • Parental controls are a separate utility • Too many open windows on the desktop • Status reports are easily spoofed into displaying Protected after incomplete antivirus and antispyware scans
  • RRP: AU$72.69

CA, formerly Computer Associates, redesigned its product line for 2007 and repackaged its Internet security suite as CA Internet Security Security 2007. It provides antivirus, antispyware, antispam, and personal firewall protection, but there are many omissions, such as antiphsihing and antirootkit protection. Online parental controls are available from an optional download.

We're not convinced CA Internet Security is the best protection on the market today. We found it too easy to get the protection status screen to display "Protected" after aborting our antivirus and antispyware scans. We still recommend ZoneAlarm Internet Security 7 for the best all-around protection.

Installation and set-up
We downloaded and installed CA Internet Security 2007 in a matter of minutes, but there are a few gotchas along the way. First, you must accept the CA end user licence agreement, then a Lesser General Public License agreement for two open-source libraries; failure to accept one or both will not allow you to continue. In order to qualify for the advertised insurance guarantees from CA, you must also submit a detailed registration form to both CA and Mobile Lifeline, which handles the security insurance, requests an e-mail address as well as a physical address.

With a one-user licence, CA allows you to install the product on up to three PCs. CA Internet Security runs on Windows 98 through XP, requires 60MB to install and 256MB of RAM to run. Parental Controls, which is a separate feature, requires an additional 25MB of hard drive space to install and only runs on Windows 2000 and XP.

This is an overview window. By clicking a topic, say Personal Firewall, CA will open a new window with the Personal Firewall settings.

The new interface is more a table of contents, giving you updated status reports on four areas: antivirus, antispyware, firewall, and antispam. If you purchase any of the individual products, you'll realise that CA Internet Security 2007 has slapped an overview window on top of, say, the CA Antivirus application. By clicking individual topics, you are taken to a new window with more specifics about the topic selected. This seems very old school -- even McAfee has updated its interface to contain all activities within one window -- and shows that the security tools are not integrated well. The downsides are that the suite as a whole takes up more system resources and that you have several open windows on your desktop.

As with Trend Micro Internet Security 2007, we had too much trouble engaging the CA Personal Firewall out of the box. We could not update the product because we could not connect to the Internet; we needed to reboot first. Only then did CA recognise that our laptop was connected to a new network and asked us to declare this network as safe or not. This should have happened upon installation. Once we marked our network as safe, we were able to update our program.

Should you want to remove CA Internet Security 2007, CA does not provide an uninstall icon. Using the Windows Control Panel Add or Remove Programs tool, you have to remove only one product (assuming all the check boxes are marked). Oddly, during uninstall, CA denied Firefox access to the Internet; only after telling it to allow Firefox did the uninstall process complete. After a reboot, we found that CA left behind no traces.

Features
Of all the Internet security suites we installed and tested, CA Internet Security 2007 took the longest to get rid of the Attention Needed flags on the overview page. Unfortunately, we found that we could cheat the process by cancelling our antivirus and antispyware scans prematurely. And we found many security protections to be missing.

Our antivirus scans took forever to run. After aborting an antivirus scan three-quarters of the way through, we were surprised to see the CA Internet Security window indicate that we had finished our antivirus scan and certify us as protected. We decided to test this on other machines and found that we could fool the antivirus status to report Protected after aborted scans on other installations. We consider this a serious design flaw.

In the past, CA has partnered with ZoneLabs for use of their award-winning ZoneAlarm firewall; not so this year. CA has created its own personal firewall, and we could not enable it after installation.

As for antispyware protection, CA renamed PestPatrol, which it purchased a few years ago, to CA Antispyware. After running a scan, we immediately disagreed with some of its findings. In particular, we found LogMeIn, a commercial remote access tool, marked as a low threat to our system, in league with Difisim, a CA-identified Trojan horse. If we accepted CA antispyware's findings, we would lose the ability to connect to our laptop remotely and might not realise that until after the fact. Oddly, by not accepting CA's findings -- by not removing or quarantining any of the potential spyware items CA found -- we found that the CA Internet Security overview window said our system was now fully protected. Clearly the products are not integrated well if they produce such easy false positives.

CA's antispam protection consists of a toolbar add-on for Outlook and Outlook Express. There is no support for either Eudora or Thunderbird, and we found no way to tweak the antispam settings. In general, we found the configuration options to be minimal.

Missing are several tools found in other Internet security suites. There is no protection against IM-launched virus attacks, no antiphishing protection provided, nor did we find mention of any antirootkit protection. In our opinion, these are serious omissions.

Performance
In terms of antivirus protection, CA Antivirus offered a mixed bag, ultimately scoring in the middle range, falling behind Norton and McAfee in most tests and far short of our best performer, Kaspersky Anti-Virus. On our iTunes test, CA Antivirus gained ground compared with last year, taking 206 seconds as opposed to 310 seconds last year. On our Sorensen Squeeze test, CA Antivirus worsened, taking 335 seconds compared to 330 seconds last year. CA Antivirus showed the most improvement with individual file scans, taking only 112 seconds this year as opposed to 221 seconds last year. And with boot speed, CA Antivirus improved, taking 63 seconds over 67 seconds last year. To find out how we test, visit CNET Labs' How we test antivirus software page.

To determine how well a product will protect your PC, we refer to test results from two leading independent antivirus testing organisations. CheckVir.com ranked CA Antivirus as one of six products to earn its Standard rating, which means the product was tested on finding but not removing antivirus threats. CA Antivirus was not reviewed by AV-Comparatives.org.

Support
CA provides support online with access to detailed knowledge base, e-mail support, and live chat support in selected markets.

CA Internet Security 2007 is a cobbled-together assemblage of existing CA consumer products that fail to integrate into one unified suite. Missing are IM protection, antiphishing, and antirootkit tools, security tools common in other suites we've seen this year. We also found that it was easy to fool CA into thinking our machine was protected, when we knew we had prematurely ended our antivirus and antispyware scans.

Topics: ca, computer associates, security, software, internet, 2007, antiphishing, antivirus, antispyware, rootkit, firewall

Comments (21)

  • Jerry gave 10/10 on 04/07/2009 04:24 Report abuse

    Hate this system!!!

    • Bad: Automatically installed parental control and refuses to uninstall.
  • zeldafitzg gave 10/10 on 22/12/2008 16:35 Report abuse

    ver 7. won't run w/ my new computer running vista--- ran on xp. got it free from RR, but useless.

    • Good: None
    • Bad: when i install after many error msgs, then i can't get on the internet. can only get back after un-installing CA.
  • zeldafitzg gave 1/10 on 22/12/2008 16:34 Report abuse

    ver 7. won't run w/ my new computer running vista--- ran on xp. got it free from RR--

    • Good: None
    • Bad: when i install after many error msgs, then i can't get on the internet. can only get back after un-installing CA.
  • tessa gave 2/10 on 22/12/2008 00:18 Report abuse

    This software has evidently been tested at the minimum because as you add more software to you computer it just does not handle the interaction with other software. I have spent so much time investigating why things all of a sudden stop working that turn out to be problem with CA that I wonder why I have it installed. I think the any virus would be better that the load of rubbish they sell as CA Internet Security.
    First I could not install all the varoius facilities. Firewall would not install on some machines - know problem that CA has not attempted to fix or has completely ignored.
    Attaching to email when the scan of incomming email is set caused outlook to completley lock up and the latest and the final saga in the whole disaster taht CA is is the parental control mdmcls.exe that stops any internet exployer access because its continually crashes and locks exployer so that the only option is to restart windows.
    I would not recommend anybody buy this software unless they only want to run very minimal software on their machines.

    • Good: Works if you can get it installed
    • Bad: Is useless if you run a business machine with resonably complex software
  • witsend gave 5/10 on 01/10/2008 14:28 Report abuse

    I have installed CA Security Suite 2008 and since, the PC has become frustratingly slow. Has anyone else had the same problem?

    • Good: Guess in the big picture it has secured my PC.
    • Bad: all users become stressed at the slowness and several times have had to configure my email to allow both incoming and outgoing mail.
  • tony16661 gave 1/10 on 19/05/2008 12:05 Report abuse

    so bad that i can't even get it to uninstall, free version from road runner isn't so free when you can't get online or check your e-mail!!

    • Good: none
    • Bad: everything about it!
  • fraz gave 2/10 on 02/03/2008 22:04 Report abuse

    used previous versions and was happy with them.this version needs to be burnt at the stake using 10 thousand litres of napalm.

    • Good: absolutely none.
    • Bad: yes it is a con.
  • olson3boys gave 2/10 on 18/01/2008 13:22 Report abuse

    CA software is complete crap. it is totally useless, it ground my computer to a halt and won't let me uninstall it completely. I can't believe this was actually released.

    • Good: absolutely none. complete junk
    • Bad: everything if I could rate it a -10 I would. Don't buy it or even take it for free like I did. You will regret it for a very long time.
  • bbmyls2go gave 2/10 on 09/12/2007 15:40 Report abuse

    one year subscription still 2 mos away and system is a total failure - no updates in past 6 months, and unable to remove it from Windows XP as it says I have to sign on as administrator - no such user on this personal pc!

    • Good: none - user rating feature doesn't work, I give this a ZERO but it won't accept anything less than 2 - wtf?
    • Bad: nightmare scenario that I can't shut down (constantly running personal firewall application, failing, and restarting install)
  • john gave 2/10 on 09/11/2007 19:58 Report abuse

    Original program was fine. Online upgrade was a disaster. Ground system down to a halt. Virtually impossible to uninstall.

    • Good: None
    • Bad: All the above comments

Post your own

Submit

Enter your personal information to the left, or sign in with your Facebook account by clicking the button below.

Connect

Where to buy CA Internet Security Suite 2007

See all options »

Must read

Advanced search

Product finder