Lavasoft has unveiled a new antivirus application it hopes will do as well as its runaway hit Ad-Aware.
The encore, Lavasoft Anti-Virus Helix, is Lavasoft's first full-fledged antivirus application. The problem is, it's nearly identical to one that already exists: Avira AntiVir.
A Lavasoft vice president told CNET in an email:
"Yes, we do have a technology partnership with Avira for the antivirus engine technology, as our company expertise is in anti-spyware. We have customers who have been asking us for years to release a stand-alone antivirus, because they do not want to be forced into using other security applications built into a suite that may not meet the standards they require ... Lavasoft's contribution to the stand-alone antivirus is a trusted brand in security software, particularly as we were the first to ever launch a commercial anti-spyware product."
Furthermore, Lavasoft admits to being opaque about its "partnership" except "when asked directly".
This is disingenuous, especially for a respected company that claims to deliver on a customer promise. It would be one thing if Lavasoft borrowed Avira's antivirus engine to complement its own anti-spyware program. It is another to thinly veil a recognised, proprietary product under a new colour scheme and stamp it as your own.
Performance
Lavasoft Anti-Virus Helix shares Avira AntiVir's interface, down to malware blockers, on-the-fly detection, a scanner, malware removal and protection from email viruses and web threats. It offers full system scanning and, in addition, lets you pick from preset scans or create a profile to scan a smaller portion of your PC, for instance, just your "C" drive.
Just like Avira AntiVir, Lavasoft's new antivirus app performed well in our tests. It beeped when encountering a suspicious file and wouldn't budge until we ignored, deleted or quarantined it. While a good practice, the need to babysit the scan could undo the benefit of any overnight scans you schedule.
Lavasoft Anti-Virus Helix lets you do any number of things with the data, including print, save and send reports. However, it could use an internal browser to look up information online about discovered threats.
Other extras can be found in the app's configuration menu. When you elect to enter expert mode, you'll be able to turn on rootkit scanning, scan outgoing email messages and specify MIME types to block (simplistically, any area of an email where malware can hitch a ride). We appreciate being able to add suspicious files from the quarantine interface.
The fact that you have to manually discover and add STMP email and specific MIME details points to one of the app's biggest problems. Compared to Ad-Aware and others in Lavasoft's family, the dowdy Anti-Virus Helix is much less user-friendly in visual appeal, navigation and organisation. In fact, it bucks the trend most publishers embrace to favour icons over text lines in order to configure and start protections.
That's little concern for intermediate and advanced users who thrive on file trees and won't mind consulting the program's thorough help file when the tool tips aren't quite explanatory enough. Casual users who prefer to set it and forget it may wonder why Ad-Aware is so simple to schedule and run but Anti-Virus Helix takes more effort. They may also wonder why this application bundle was marketed under a new name in the first place.












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