Microsoft Is Adding Linux, Android, and Firmware Protections To Windows (arstechnica.com) 19
An anonymous reader quotes a report from Ars Technica: Microsoft is moving forward with its promise to extend enterprise security protections to non-Windows platforms with the general release of a Linux version and a preview of one for Android. The software maker is also beefing up Windows security protections to scan for malicious firmware. The Linux and Android moves -- detailed in posts published on Tuesday here, here, and here -- follow a move last year to ship antivirus protections to macOS. Microsoft disclosed the firmware feature last week. All the new protections are available to users of Microsoft Advanced Threat Protection and require Windows 10 Enterprise Edition. Public pricing from Microsoft is either non-existent or difficult to find, but according to this site, costs range from $30 to $72 per machine per year to enterprise customers. "We are just at the beginning of our Linux journey and we are not stopping here!" Tuesday's post announcing the Linux general availability said. "We are committed to continuous expansion of our capabilities for Linux and will be bringing you enhancements in the coming months."
The Android preview, meanwhile, provides several protections, including:
- The blocking of phishing sites and other high-risk domains and URLs accessed through SMS/text, WhatsApp, email, browsers, and other apps. The features use the same Microsoft Defender
- SmartScreen services that are already available for Windows so that decisions to block suspicious sites will apply across all devices on a network.
- Proactive scanning for malicious or potentially unwanted applications and files that may be downloaded to a mobile device.
- Measures to block access to network resources when devices show signs of being compromised with malicious apps or malware.
- Integration to the same Microsoft Defender Security Center that's already available for Windows, macOS, and Linux. As for the new firmware protections, Microsoft's new offering via Microsoft Defender "scans Unified Extensible Firmware Interface, which is the successor to the traditional BIOS that most computers used during the boot process to locate and enumerate hardware installed," adds Ars. "The firmware scanner uses a new component added to virus protection already built into Defender."
The Android preview, meanwhile, provides several protections, including:
- The blocking of phishing sites and other high-risk domains and URLs accessed through SMS/text, WhatsApp, email, browsers, and other apps. The features use the same Microsoft Defender
- SmartScreen services that are already available for Windows so that decisions to block suspicious sites will apply across all devices on a network.
- Proactive scanning for malicious or potentially unwanted applications and files that may be downloaded to a mobile device.
- Measures to block access to network resources when devices show signs of being compromised with malicious apps or malware.
- Integration to the same Microsoft Defender Security Center that's already available for Windows, macOS, and Linux. As for the new firmware protections, Microsoft's new offering via Microsoft Defender "scans Unified Extensible Firmware Interface, which is the successor to the traditional BIOS that most computers used during the boot process to locate and enumerate hardware installed," adds Ars. "The firmware scanner uses a new component added to virus protection already built into Defender."
Should be... (Score:3, Insightful)
Microsoft Is Adding Linux, Android, and Firmware Protections To Defender
I feel like I'm reading a tabloid newspaper when people can't even be bothered to have a title that matches the article content.
Re: (Score:2)
51125?? Really? You've been here for YEEEAAAARRRS, and you are just now realizing that slashdot has become exactly that? Mostly politically motivated content, is what slashdot is now, but that old dead horse that is "Linux vs Windows" still causes some to get out of bed, too. Very rarely does anyone learn anything here. It's a cesspool of know-it-alls that can't be bothered to read the summary, much less the actual article. I've been thinking that lately, some don't read the whole title either.
Re: (Score:1)
Re: (Score:2)
They've split the article in two, the other one about it available for Android is still on the front page so this is kind of of dupe, again.
Microsoft Releases First Public Preview of its Defender Antivirus on Android:
https://tech.slashdot.org/stor... [slashdot.org]
$75 for a virus scanner? (Score:2)
Welcome to 2020.
Re: (Score:1)
what i am (Score:2)
GPL? (Score:4, Interesting)
Surely that factors in here.
Does it block Windows 10? (Score:2)
- Measures to block access to network resources when devices show signs of being compromised with malicious apps or malware.
Like Windows 10?
will Linux ones be kernel version tied and brake a (Score:2)
will Linux ones be kernel version tied and brake all the time?
Embrace Extend Extinguish (Score:1)
Should be titled: "Microsoft advances from embrace to extend with android and linux. We expect this to last 2-3 years before we enter the final extinguish phase.
Not sure about this... (Score:1)
Consumers do not trust Microsoft. If Apple were to have free Antivirus sofware the perception would be very different.
Consumers see microsoft = work. boring and hard. Apple = cool, fast, and attractive.
You can't buy this, you have to earn it....
I've Waited So Long (Score:2)
Priorities (Score:3)
"Pricing" (Score:3)
lol.
This. Is. Linux!
*kicks MS into pit*