Macworld

Norton 360 Deluxe

Price: £29.99 (inc VAT) from fave.co/31jxrty

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Most companies that are primarily PC antivirus vendors treat their Mac software as an afterthoug­ht. They cover the basics for security, but extra features are few and far between.

That’s not the case with Nortonlife­lock (formerly Symantec). It offers a lot of value for Norton 360’s £30 per year for new subscriber­s or £100 per year for returning customers. For

that money, Norton 360 Deluxe covers up to five devices including Macs, PCS, smartphone­s, and tablets. And it offers a lot more to Mac users than just malware protection. It also brings with it a password manager, free VPN access, parental controls, 50GB of cloud backup and so-called dark web monitoring. On top of that there’s the Clean function for getting rid of duplicate files, old applicatio­n files, and more.

Norton 360 includes multiple applicatio­ns. It starts with the My Norton applicatio­n, which is just a launcher for the important stuff including

Device Security, the VPN, Password Manager and Cloud Backup. There are also links to Parental Controls and dark web monitoring on the Norton website. Device Security is the main applicatio­n, which houses all the virus protection. Taking a look at Av-test’s March 2020 Mac malware tests, Norton Security scored 100 per cent against 58 samples in the widespread and prevalent malware test. That’s the score you want, but it is against a small sample size.

Av-comparativ­es’ most recent Mac security test from June 2019 didn’t cover Norton, which is too bad since its test includes Windows malware detection.

In our spot tests with the Objective See malware repository, Norton had no trouble dealing with the malware we found there. The only complaint we had was that Norton wasn’t notifying us when it detected malware. Instead, it just deleted or quarantine­d the suspicious file. We had to open the security history log just to see what Norton did. A few days later, however, Norton started notifying us of issues. We did allow notificati­ons immediatel­y, but for some reason it took a few days for Norton 360 to catch up. We haven’t seen that with other antivirus products.

After the Objective See test we did something unusual since testing was so sparse. We visited a torrent site that often has rogue adware just to see what would happen. As soon as we landed on the site it offered to install Adobe Flash Player. That, right there, is a massive flag since rogue

Adobe downloader­s are a common tool for malware delivery. So we did what any curious tech site would do and went through the installati­on process. Of course macos was screaming at us the entire time that we definitely shouldn’t be installing this, but we wanted to see how Norton would handle it.

Long story short, it didn’t. The supposed Adobe Flash player installed without a peep from Norton, and it installed a rogue version of the Opera browser to boot. A full scan didn’t reveal that we’d installed malware, and the security history showed that Norton 360 didn’t take any action.

It’s at this point we need to mention that we alerted Nortonlife­lock to the issue, and Norton 360 can now detect this malware. At the time, however, this was not the case.

Once the rogue programs were installed, we uploaded the original installati­on file to Virustotal

to see what multiple engines had to say about it. Unbelievab­ly, most antivirus engines didn’t catch it with the exception of a few including AVG, Avast and Kaspersky.

Based on those results we looked up the malware and at first we thought it was just annoying adware, as well as Qsearch a well-known browser hijacker. Then the rogue copy of Opera started up all on its own, and Norton’s firewall caught it trying to open a port. Not great, but kudos to the firewall for stopping this.

In the real world very few people would actually install this software since macos protests so much. Still, Norton should have been a backstop for those edge cases where people ignore all the warnings and plunge ahead or, as Appleinsid­er reported, users follow unusual instructio­ns.

In addition to antivirus, Norton packs its own firewall with a good amount of customizab­ility if you want it. It can block incoming and outgoing connection­s based on applicatio­ns, ports and IP addresses. The default settings should be fine for most people, but advanced users can tinker with the firewall if they want.

The newest addition to Deluxe Security is the Dark Web Monitoring powered by Lifelock

– a company Nortonlife­lock acquired in 2016. Several antivirus suites offer dark web monitoring, which basically scans suspicious Onion sites

and online forums for leaked databases of credit cards, usernames, passwords, and other personal informatio­n. For this feature to work you need to tell the service what to monitor such as your bank account or credit card number, phone, address, drivers license number, insurance details, gamertags, emails (up to five addresses) and mother’s maiden name.

Verdict

Norton 360 Security Deluxe offers a lot for the money, though that failed detection does give us pause. Most people won’t find a problem with Norton, but if you are visiting questionab­le corners of the web (and prone to ignore Apple’s built-in warnings) then Norton may not be the suite for you. Anyone looking for something comprehens­ive, however, should give Norton 360 Security Deluxe a look. Ian Paul

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 ??  ?? Norton 360 Security Deluxe with a finished scan
Norton 360 Security Deluxe with a finished scan
 ??  ?? Most people wouldn’t take it this far, but it’s still important your antivirus acts as a backstop for edge cases like this
Most people wouldn’t take it this far, but it’s still important your antivirus acts as a backstop for edge cases like this
 ??  ?? After we notified Nortonlife­lock, Norton 360 Deluxe now detects the problemati­c malware we found
After we notified Nortonlife­lock, Norton 360 Deluxe now detects the problemati­c malware we found
 ??  ?? Norton 360 Security Deluxe’s Clean feature
Norton 360 Security Deluxe’s Clean feature

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