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Microsoft Acquires RAV Antivirus

Webmoth writes "Microsoft has announced the assimilation of RAV Antivirus from GeCAD Software of Romania. This is significant, because RAV Antivirus was one of the few antivirus products that provided cross-platform email virus scanning and spam filtering, integrating with sendmail and postfix on Linux (among others). No word yet on the impact to non-Microsoft users. In the process, they've left RAE Internet, the (former) exclusive U.S. distributor of RAV Antivirus, along with a host of authorized resellers, in the dust."

7 of 461 comments (clear)

  1. Possible addition to Exchange? by Influxx · · Score: 5, Interesting

    This sounds like something they will bundle with their new version of Exchange server due out later this year.

  2. Hold on.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Wasn't Palladium supposed to make Windows boxes virus-free? Why bother buying up an antivirus company when their future plans are to make virus scanners obsolete?

  3. Re:maybe I'm just a half-full kinda guy... by macdaddy · · Score: 5, Interesting

    And rather anti-competitive, don't you think? I mean if they include it as part of the OS distribution and integrate it into the overall OS, wouldn't that hinder the efforts of other companies that make competing software? Think of the ramifications. What if they made a Internet chat application, Internet web browser, Internet connection software and services, word processors, or even spreadsheet programs and integrated them into their operating system. Oh wait...

  4. Re:Trustworthy computing... by retto · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I wonder if you can use an anti-virus program to scan for copyrighted files? If used in conjuction with a subscription system, would it be possible for a modified AV program to detect what software you have running and if you have a valid subscription or not.

    not to get all paranoid or anything...

  5. linux market penetration by maliabu · · Score: 5, Interesting

    cross-platform email virus scanning and spam filtering, integrating with sendmail and postfix on Linux

    Is this one way to penetrate Linux server markets and make some money of out it? So even if you switch from Windows to Linux, you might still be paying to MS one way or another.

  6. OMG! John Dvorak was actually RIGHT!? by drgroove · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Dvorak predicted this would happen in a PCMag editorial back in 2001:
    http://www.pcmag.com/article2/0,4149,6271,00.asp

    His reasoning is fairly sanguine as well - Virus updating over the web gives MS a perfect excuse to connect to your Windows PC and - along with updating your virus software (perhaps daily!) - sniff around to see what apps you have installed, check out any illegal software/music/etc, look for that Linux partition (and corrupt it?)... pretty scary.

    MS connecting to your PC daily... Dvorak was right about something... its all just too much at once. Perhaps this article should be under 'Further signs of the apocalypse'?

  7. Theories of not-enough-satisfaction of marketshare by Hackie_Chan · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Here are a couple of harmless words by me, please be constructive with your critisism. I am a padawan nerd after all...

    Once again Microsoft do one of their trademark things; shady deals and corporate buyouts. There's no other reason why Microsoft bought this company other than it provided good services on another platform. This doesn't come as a suprise really. Seems to me that lately they're not really satisfied with owning 95%+ of the market.

    Never believe in the official word Microsoft give. That's rule number one. Look at the reason why they bought Connectix. The official word was because of the technology they had with running several operating systems on the same computer, or something like that. Well, it becomes even more obvious when you look at the fact that Connectix was the only Windows emulation software on the Mac, backed up by the fact that Microsoft have been lacking on updates for their Mac software recently. In other words, they want to kill Apple.

    Why? Seems to me that Microsoft is now doing whatever it can with in legal boundries to finish all the competitive forces. They're now piece by piece peeling the bana of Apple. Before you know it, Microsoft will kill Office for Mac and Apple will die of nothing is done about it.

    Infact, didn't Microsoft make an agreement or licencing deal with SCO a couple of months ago right before they started suing companies for stealing their code? Have none of you ever thought of that connection?

    In other words... Looks like Microsoft has pulled in to high gear in fear, by doing what they do best: kill the opponents by buying them away.

    --

    What's so bad about being lazy? What if there was a war and nobody showed up?