Microsoft
has admitted that there is still work to be done on its
Windows
Live OneCare security software.
Separate disclosures by a European product manager and a member of the
Microsoft Security Research and Response team revealed that the company is not
satisfied with the performance of the anti-malware application.
According to media reports, Arno Edelmann, European business security product
manager at Microsoft, told reporters at the
CeBIT
conference that "bits and pieces are missing" from OneCare.
Addressing recent reports of OneCare
deleting Outlook
Express email, Edelmann said that the incident was due to incompatibilities
between antivirus components of OneCare and Outlook's 'mailserver' component.
Microsoft Security Research and Response team member Jimmy Kuo admitted on
the company's
Anti-Malware
Engineering Team blog that recent test results have been "less than stellar
" and that OneCare is not yet up to competing products.
A pair of high-profile tests in the past two months have yielded grim results
for Microsoft.
Independent testing firm
Virus
Bulletin revealed in February that OneCare was one of four anti-malware
suites to fail its
AV Bulletin threat detection tests.
AV
Comparatives added insult to injury earlier this month, delivering a
'fail' grade to
OneCare in a test of 500,000 malware samples.
Kuo said that the poor test results were primarily due to the company's focus
on detecting the most dangerous in-the-wild threats, and not on scoring well in
tests. Kuo did admit, however, that OneCare needs to improve its scores.
"Even if a company network is running smoothly, the boss will see these test
results and bug the administrators about them. So it is also about making sure
our customers 'feel' better protected when using our products," said Kuo.
"You will see our results gradually and steadily increase until they are on
par with the other majors in this area."
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