Symantec and McAfee “should have prepared better” for Microsoft Vista, rival
IT security firm Sophos claimed today.
Symantec and McAfee have recently made high-profile complaints that they are
being "locked out" of the Vista operating system kernel by Microsoft's
PatchGuard technology. It is claimed that this allegedly anti-competitive move
by Microsoft will prevent security firms from developing host intrusion
prevention (HIPS) systems for Vista to protect against new malware.
However, Sophos argues that its approach to HIPS technology has met with no
problems on both the low-spec and high-spec versions of Windows Vista. In
addition, Sophos claims that Microsoft has so far provided all the interfaces
that Sophos needs for providing this form of protection.
"Symantec and McAfee may be struggling with HIPS because they haven't coded
their solutions with high-spec Vista in mind," said Richard Jacobs, CTO of
Sophos.
"We've taken a different approach, by focusing on catching bad behaviour before
it has a chance to occur. Additionally, we are building our technology by making
use of supported Microsoft interfaces rather than by trying to subvert them.
That's why we're ready for 64-bit Vista, and others aren't."
Jacobs added that he believes PatchGuard is a “positive step” by Microsoft to
improve security in Windows Vista, and is not in itself anti-competitive,
provided that Microsoft delivers on its commitment to provide the same level of
kernel support and integration to third party security vendors as it does to its
own security product team.
"It's clearly the case that we and other vendors will now have some
dependency on Microsoft to deliver kernel interfaces for new security
innovations, which could slow us all down," continued Jacobs.
"However this is more than compensated for by the additional security offered
by Vista. PatchGuard is a step in the right direction for customers, and we
believe that security vendors should embrace and work with PatchGuard rather
than fight it."
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