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Symantec Hopes To Deliver Anti-Virus Online

daria42 writes "Symantec today said it will slowly move towards supplying its consumer applications online as services." From the article: "Sykes also said there was the possibility that tiny pieces of an application or a single virus scan could be resold by organisations such as online banks, which may choose to ensure their customers are not infected with a virus or spyware before they log on to their account ... This could be paid for by the customer using their credit card or by adding it to their mobile phone bill by sending a text message, said Sykes, who warned that banks could decide not to provide access to anyone with an infected computer."

3 of 148 comments (clear)

  1. I don't want to by NotoriousGOD · · Score: 4, Insightful

    What if I don't want to pay my bank for a stupid virus service. My bank should be a BANK. What, is Norton going to help me save money in a high interest bearing account now? Businesses should stick to what they do, so they do it best, instead of trying to be "user friendly".

    --
    Where all think alike, no one thinks very much.
  2. Uh, no thanks... by maillemaker · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Every time I see a pop-up advertisement that says:

    "YOUR COMPUTER COULD BE INFECTED WITH SPYWARE - CLICK HERE"

    It sends up huge red flags for me, and I always shut them down without clicking. I've seen so many of them (wanting to optimize my Windows, etc.) that I'm now gun shy of any such remote scanning application.

    I'll be thinking long and hard about letting anything scan my system through my firewall.

    Steve

    --
    A work that expires before its copyright never enters the public domain and thus enjoys eternal copyright protection.
  3. Whoa there nellie... not such a hot idea... by Akardam · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Maybe I'm a bit jaded at having been in the computer support industry for too long, but with the proliferation of nasties these days that disrupt internet connectivity in one form or another, I'm skeptical as to whether this is going to actually work. Hell, a good percentage of infections these days, be they viruses or malware, require manual cleaning, often from safe mode or self contained non-volatile bootable media. Even Symantec overwhelmingly recommends booting to safe mode to clean infections in most of their AV DB articles.