Symantec
has launched a new subscription antivirus service called Norton
Security. The offering will be priced at Rs. 1,399 per year for a single
PC or Mac. A Deluxe edition covering up to five PCs, Macs, smartphones
or tablets will also be available for Rs. 2,999 per year, and a Premium
edition which covers up to 10 such devices and also includes parental
controls and 25GB of online backup space will cost Rs. 4,599 per year. As a limited period introductory offer, Symantec will sell the three packages for Rs. 749, Rs. 1,399 and Rs. 2,999 respectively for the first year.
The
company wants to simplify its product lineup which previously consisted
of Norton Antivirus, Norton Internet Security and Norton 360. Symantec
is positioning its new service as a solution for advanced current-day
threats such as individualised phishing scams and man-in-the-middle
attacks.
At a pre-launch event in Mumbai, Gerry Egan, Senior Director
of Norton Product Management at Symantec specifically highlighted
ransomware attacks and cybercriminals who try to steal personal
information as more relevant to current day security than just viruses.
Browser-based tools provide warnings to users about social engineering
scams, potentially compromised websites, and drive-by malware downloads.
Windows 10, 8.1, 7, Vista and XP are supported, as well as the
current and previous two versions of Mac OS X. Android 2.3 or higher
running the Google Play services and iOS 7 and later can run Norton
Security. However, the Microsoft Edge browser and Windows 8 Modern UI
apps aren't supported. The software will be available as a digital download only; Symantec will not offer boxed packages at retail.
Norton Security leverages the company's
global threat intelligence tools which monitor email messages, websites,
and apps including app stores, to proactively identify breaches that
might result in customers' personal data being compromised.
Customers
of Norton Security will get free 24/7 phone support. Symantec is so
confident of its offering that is guaranteeing a 100 percent refund to
customers if a breach occurs and one of the company's own engineers
fails to remove the threat completely.
Egan was also quick to
distance the company's current offerings from those several years ago
which were heavily criticised for slowing down PCs. Calling that an
industry-wide problem, he characterised the performance impact of the
new Norton Security service in terms of lag at boot time as less than
one second. The program can run in the background and never really has
to run a deep scan of the user's entire hard drive, since all incoming
files are cleared at the time of creation. Norton Security can also use
checksums to verify the integrity of known good files rather than
scanning them entirely to detect changes.
When asked about
ensuring security in a world in which users have multiple devices with
multiple connectivity fronts and therefore more avenues for digital
attacks than ever before, Egan said the company was exploring all
avenues, including the possibility of offering VPN services, a private
DNS, and embedded solutions for the Internet of Things.