PC Pro

Microsoft Defender Antivirus

Microsoft’s hassle-free integrated malware defences epitomise “if it ain’t’ broke, don’t fix it”

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“It aced the latest tests from AV-Test and SE Labs with perfect protection scores, and a 99.5% rating in AV Comparativ­es”

PRICE Free with Windows 10 and 11

Microsoft markets a whole range of personal and enterprise security products under the Defender brand. In this review, we’re specifical­ly looking at the free Microsoft Defender Antivirus and associated features that come built into the Windows 10 and Windows 11 Security app.

This includes a raft of anti-malware defences, including the all-important real-time protection. There’s also the Windows firewall, which is perfectly functional, even if the interface for opening ports isn’t as glossy as some rivals. And the final big weapon is Microsoft Family Safety, one of the best parental control suites around.

You may be surprised to hear that it has dedicated ransomware protection tools, too. Folders can be protected from unauthoris­ed changes, and you can also sync important files to (and recover them from) OneDrive cloud storage. Then there’s the optional reputation-based protection against potentiall­y unwanted apps and websites to ensure that only known-safe content can be installed or accessed.

The Windows Security interface is a pleasure to use, as are its related components. You’ll find controls for real-time malware protection and on-demand scans, configurat­ion of your ransomware protection, plus links to your firewall and parental controls (these are managed elsewhere).

Defender is focused on real-time malware protection, which it’s very good at. If you want to schedule scans, however, you have to set them up via Task Scheduler. This is a chore as it involves delving into a legacy Windows interface that’s in need of a revamp. Whether scheduled scans serve a useful purpose in the age of online threats is another question, but a shortcut for those who want them would be useful.

Microsoft’s Family Safety parental controls are primarily web-based and require more configurat­ion than some rivals. But they’re incredibly comprehens­ive and effectivel­y balance parental protection with the rights of older children, in particular to a certain degree of privacy.

Family Safety is fully integrated with Windows, but it also provides comprehens­ive support for mobile devices that run Android and iOS. Features include web-content filtering, screen-time controls, Windows Store purchase protection and family location sharing. If you set up everyone in your family with their own Microsoft account – the optimal way of configurin­g Family Safety – all your settings are synced across every device a user is logged into. However, it’s worth noting that Family Safety browser controls only cover Microsoft’s Edge browser and will by default block other browsers.

Returning to malware protection, Defender will, of course, still stop malware that comes in via any browser, and if you want to use its dedicated browser protection plugins, these are available for Google Chrome, as well as the Chromium-based Edge.

On a purely practical level, you want your operating system to provide at least some kind of functional protection against malware. Although the integratio­n of Defender into Windows gives it an arguably unfair advantage against commercial rivals, in the same way that Windows users are now aggressive­ly encouraged to use Edge, Defender’s reliabilit­y means that you can install Windows and immediatel­y go online without worrying about a random drive-by download dropping malware the first time you visit an ad-infested media site.

It’s also extremely low maintenanc­e and requires minimal user interactio­ns, which means you can trust it not to go wrong in the hands of inexperien­ced users.

This wide adoption also means that Microsoft gets plenty of opportunit­y to collect samples of the latest malicious files. Despite this, Defender’s performanc­e in anti-malware testing tends to vacillate somewhere between decent and perfect; it’s not as consistent as some of its rivals. Still, it aced the latest tests from AV-Test and SE Labs with perfect protection scores, and a 99.5% defence rating with seven false positives in AV Comparativ­es’ most recent detection test.

AV-Test also found that Defender can have a bigger impact on system performanc­e than its rivals. This is particular­ly visible on low-spec systems when they install applicatio­ns and copy files, where rivals such as Avast have much less of a footprint.

Note also that, if you’re running legacy Windows 7 systems, you’ll need to use a different antivirus solution, such as Avast or G Data, as Microsoft no longer supports its older OS with security updates. And Defender for that older OS was a less comprehens­ive solution in the first place.

For most users concerned about how to best keep Windows safe, Defender does the job as well as anything else unless you have specific requiremen­ts.

 ?? ?? The Windows Security interface is a pleasure to use
The Windows Security interface is a pleasure to use
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