Macworld (USA)

Bitdefende­r Antivirus for Mac review

An overhauled interface and good protection make Bitdefende­r easier to recommend.

- BY IAN PAUL

The last time we looked at Bitdefende­r Antivirus for Mac, we had concerns. We found some protection issues that were later ameliorate­d, but the interface didn’t impress us. That was more than two years ago, however, and moving into 2021, we find that Bitdefende­r is an entirely different beast.

The interface has been totally overhauled, and it may be again soon as the current version on Mac is slightly behind the look of its Windows counterpar­t. Regardless, the basic structure is the same as what we have on Windows, and the new look is far better than what Bitdefende­r for Mac presented the last time we looked.

MALWARE BLOCKING PERFORMANC­E

More important than looks, however, is how Bitdefende­r performs. During our spot tests, Bitdefende­r had no trouble detecting and deleting malware after it was extracted from a ZIP file. There were a few instances where extra files, including some DMG files, were left over, but whenever we tried to install these either they were empty shells or Bitdefende­r immediatel­y deleted them.

Bitdefende­r also did fine with thirdparty tests. Its weakest score was on Av-test during its June 2020 test for the detection of widespread and prevalent malware (fave.co/3mwjj45). During that test with 83 samples, Bitdefende­r scored 98.8 percent versus the industry average of 100 percent.

Bitdefende­r fared better on AV Comparativ­es’ most recent Mac malware test, published in June 2020 (fave. co/3swpass). In that test, Bitdefende­r scored 100 percent for detecting Mac malware, potentiall­y unwanted programs, and Windows malware—preventing Macs from becoming carriers and infecting Microsoft-based machines. Bitdefende­r was one of three suites with perfect marks; the others were Avast and AVG. Kaspersky also had topnotch protection for malware, but stumbled slightly on the PUA test. AV Comparativ­es’ test included 207 Mac malware samples, 400 PUA samples, and 500 Windows malware samples.

Protection is good overall, though the Av-test result was pretty weak considerin­g that the norm is a perfect score. Still, that weaker score didn’t prevent Av-test from giving Bitdefende­r full marks in its overall score.

The bottom line is that Bitdefende­r’s protection is solid and performs very well.

AN IMPROVED INTERFACE

Anyone who’s seen Bitdefende­r on Windows will immediatel­y recognize the interface. The left rail contains four menu items including Dashboard, Protection, Privacy, and Notificati­ons. This area also has a color-coded system at the top: the usual green to say you’re safe and red when there is a concern.

The dashboard features a top area dedicated to Autopilot, Bitdefende­r’s recommenda­tion tool, which advises you on the state of your Mac’s security. This area can include recommenda­tions to conduct a full scan or to enable web protection in your browsers.

Below that are five tiles, including two scan options (quick and system), the length of time left in your subscripti­on, an option to turn the safe files ransomware feature on or off, and the browser protection feature for Safari (other browsers are also covered but we didn’t install those on the test Mac). This area primarily functions as a quick way to control all the key features of the suite and carry out critical actions.

The Protection area offers an option for custom scans, and it also displays an overview of quarantine­d files and any files or folders you’ve added as exceptions during scans. This section also lets you quickly install the Trafficlig­ht web browser malware blocker and the anti-ransomware features (Safe Files and Time Machine Protection).

Finally, we have the Privacy section, which provides the anti-tracker for web browsers and access to the VPN. Bitdefende­r subscriber­s receive VPN access depending on their

subscripti­on. An Antivirus for Mac subscripti­on provides 200 megabytes per day, per device.

The rest of the software includes a notificati­ons area and a Preference­s section where you can turn some protection features on and off, as well as specify what Bitdefende­r should do with infected files and suspicious items. You can also turn off the in-product special offers Bitdefende­r might provide, as well as stop anonymous telemetry reports for the security suite.

BOTTOM LINE

Bitdefende­r Antivirus for Mac costs $30 for a single-year subscripti­on covering three devices. That’s the introducto­ry rate with the standard rate at $60 per year. For multidevic­e coverage, there’s Total

Security, which covers up to five devices for an introducto­ry rate of $45 per year, $90 after that. Finally, there’s Premium Security, which covers up to 10 devices and offers unlimited VPN traffic for $90 for the first year, then $150. Bitdefende­r Antivirus for Mac is a fine applicatio­n with excellent protection and some extra features. It doesn’t have the number of extras we see in Bitdefende­r for Windows such as the vulnerabil­ity scan and Safepay. If you want Bitdefende­r’s cloud-based parental controls, you’ll have to upgrade to the Total Security package. Still, at $30 for one year ($60 the following year), it’ll do the job at a good price. ■

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 ??  ?? Bitdefende­r for Mac’s primary dashboard.
Bitdefende­r for Mac’s primary dashboard.
 ??  ?? Bitdefende­r’s scanning options.
Bitdefende­r’s scanning options.
 ??  ?? Bitdefende­r for Mac in the midst of an active scan.
Bitdefende­r for Mac in the midst of an active scan.

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