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Google Buys Anti-Malware Security Startup

J Tomas writes "Google has quietly made its first anti-malware acquisition, snapping up GreenBorder Technologies, a venture-backed company that sells browser virtualization security software. GreenBorder's software creates a DMZ (demilitarized zone) between the Windows desktop and programs downloaded from Web pages or opened from e-mail messages in Microsoft Outlook. The early speculation is that Google will add the sandbox technology to the Google Toolbar or release a rebranded version as a standalone download."

8 of 125 comments (clear)

  1. Thanks... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny


    GreenBorder's software creates a DMZ (demilitarized zone) between the Windows desktop and programs downloaded from Web pages or opened from e-mail messages in Microsoft Outlook.

    Dear GreenBorder,

    Thank you for doing work we should have done years ago.
    Unfortunately this level of work requires considerable resources
    which would drive down our bottom line and
    shareholder confidence.

    William Gates III
    Microsoft Corporation

  2. Google is the new Microsoft, etc. etc. by athloi · · Score: 5, Insightful

    ...proving that corporations aren't evil, but trying to stay on top when you're top dog might corrupt absolutely. This would not have happened in "Lord of the Rings."

    I refuse to demonize corporations, because I know that people run them and do the best they can with an often paradoxical set of goals. I remember when one boss I worked for sold his company to a larger technological concern, and suddenly all the rules changed. Image became more important than reality. We did everything we could to inflate figures. And the guy who once spent hours thinking about "the next cool thing we'd all like to use" stayed up late looking over spreadsheets, metrics, indicators and other spaced-out crap that has no relevance to reality.

    We might call this time "the devirginization of Google," as they are inducted to the weird malevolent world of corporate politics as the top dog in the Darwinian internet struggle for virtual world domination.

    1. Re:Google is the new Microsoft, etc. etc. by Paulrothrock · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Corporations aren't evil in the same way that sharks aren't evil. They're just doing what comes naturally. Sharks eat furry little sea lions; corporations make money. If either stopped doing what came naturally, they'd die.

      The key is to harness the corporation in such a way that it improves the lives of individuals without running roughshod over society. And that is the point of regulation. Well, that *should be* the point of regulation.

      --
      I'm in the hole of the broadband donut.
  3. virtualization DMZ.. by rs232 · · Score: 4, Funny

    When did Linux steal this innovative technology and rename it chroot.

    --
    davecb5620@gmail.com
  4. Great ... :-S by SplatMan_DK · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Great!

    Yet another piece of software that interferes with my network layer, slows my PC, and eats half my CPU cycles just to keep malware from infecting my machine.

    When will we see a REAL solution to these problems, and stop implementing obscure security work-arounds that eat more resources than the applications themselves? Anyone?

    When more than 50% of the CPU cycles in my PC go to security software (Antivirus, Antiphising, Antispyware, Antiadware, Antifraud, heuristics scanning, SPAM filter, personal firewall, strange DMZ browser-thingeys) during the display of a simple HTML page in a browser i would say that our current approach is broken. Totally.

    I need an Anti-security-bloatware product. And fast!

    --
    My security clearance is so high I have to kill myself if I remember I have it...
  5. Re:The term DMZ by Volante3192 · · Score: 4, Informative

    A firewall, however, would block it. DMZs are areas inside the first firewall to keep the majority of the intruders out, but outside the second, more locked down, firewall that protects the internal network. Technically the area inside the first firewall isn't "safe," it's just "safer." DMZs can still be subject to malicious traffic because boxes inside DMZs, like webservers, by design have to keep certain known ports open.

    I think the ideal term for what Google picked up is sandbox, where stuff can run and it doesn't impact the rest of the system so you can see what it is beforehand, but DMZ looks like it could apply.

    Interesting idea if it does what I think, at least. Would have figured a sandbox for a plugin was rather intensive processor wise.

  6. Neo-security Methodology by Nymz · · Score: 5, Funny

    1) Install every anti-virus, firewall, virtual sandbox DMZ, and toolbar that you can.
    2) Sustain 99% CPU usage.
    3) Protected!

  7. Test by setrops · · Score: 4, Informative

    Well I was asked to evaluate this product 2 years ago. At the time it was not very useful as there were some problems. But last year when they did their update it was a good improvement on speed and memory foot print. For what it does the product works well. And with Googles money and resources behind it, it can only get better.