360 Safeguard

360安全卫士
Developer(s) Qihoo 360
Initial release 17 July 2008 (2008-07-17)
Stable release
11.0 (Microsoft Windows)
1.2.3 (Mac OS X) / 28 September 2016 (2016-09-28) (Microsoft Windows)
22 September 2015 (2015-09-22) (Mac OS X)
Preview release
11.1 (Microsoft Windows) 14 October 2016 (2016-10-14)
Development status Active
Operating system Microsoft Windows XP and above, Linux, Mac OS X
Size 60.2MB
Available in Simplified Chinese
Type Anti Trojan
License Freeware, proprietary
Website http://www.360.cn/weishi/index.html
360 Total Security
Developer(s) Qihoo 360
Initial release 2.0.0.1326 Beta 25 February 2014 (2014-02-25)
Stable release
9.0.0.1069 / 29 November 2016 (2016-11-29)
Development status Active
Operating system Microsoft Windows XP and above, Linux, Mac OS X
Size 42.8MB
Available in Traditional Chinese, Simplified Chinese, English, Japanese, German, Spanish, Portuguese, Turkish, Vietnamese, Arabic, Hindi
Type Antivirus software
License Freeware, proprietary
Website https://www.360totalsecurity.com/en/

360 Safeguard (Chinese: 360安全卫士) is a program developed by Qihoo 360, an IT company based in China. 360 Safeguard's focus is on stopping computer viruses, malware, and trojan horses, and providing security patches for Microsoft Windows. 360 Safeguard trojan horses scanner is cloud-based. A heuristics engine is built into the scanner.

Features

Dispute with Tencent

Main article: 360 v. Tencent

In 2010, 360 Safeguard analyzed the QQ protocol and accused QQ of automatically scanning users' computers and of uploading their personal information to QQ's servers without users' consent. In response, Tencent called 360 itself malware and denied users with 360 installed access to some QQ services. The Chinese Ministry of Industry and Information reprimanded both companies for "improper competition" and ordered them to come to an accord.[1]

Dispute with testing bodies

On April 30, 2015 the three independent security testing bodies AV-Comparatives, AV-TEST and Virus Bulletin published a joint press release criticizing Qihoo 360 after they found that Qihoo 360 had submitted products for comparative which behaved significantly different from end user products. The products for comparative used an engine by Bitdefender, while the end user products use Qihoo 360's own QVM engine instead. The testing bodies claimed that the end user products would provide a considerably lower level of protection and a higher likelihood of false positives. As a consequence the three testing bodies revoked all certifications and rankings from earlier that year.[2]

Qihoo 360 denied cheating allegations claiming that the QVM engine developed by Qihoo 360 would be more effective in China.[3]

See also

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 12/1/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.