Details are starting to emerge about Microsoft's forthcoming security product
for consumers to replace the cancelled Windows Live OneCare subscription
service.
Microsoft Security Essentials,
previously
codenamed Morro, is due to be released as a public beta on 23 June, but will
only be available to testers in the US, Israel, Brazil and China. Like OneCare,
Security Essentials will be free to Windows users.
A full version is set to be released sometime in the second half of 2009,
according to Microsoft. This will be available in 10 languages across the UK and
western Europe, plus Japan, New Zealand, Canada, Australia and Singapore, as
well as those markets covered by the beta release.
Few details have been officially disclosed, but Microsoft said in a statement
that Security Essentials is the "no-cost anti-malware service that provides
real-time protection to address the ongoing security needs of a Windows PC,
helping to protect it from viruses, spyware and other malicious threats".
Other reports indicate that Security Essentials is based on the core
technology in Microsoft's
Forefront
business security products, but lacks the management capabilities.
Do you agree?
Have your say on this article