Norton AntiVirus Definitions are the latest anti-virus detection files. The installer will automatically update Norton AntiVirus virus definitions and engine files to detect and repair the most recently discovered Macintosh viruses. This file is a self-extracting archive which contains the Norton AntiVirus Virus Definitions Installer. Once downloaded and expanded on your hard drive, simply double-click on the Installer and the appropriate files will be installed on your computer.
Mac viruses, what Mac viruses? :) I haven't needed it yet, but it updates fine and doesn't slow down my Mac. It has found PC viruses on flash drives from PC using friends, so it was kind of helpful to them.
And we know you are very naive Baddington, B. I have a few bridges for sale if you are interested. I'd like to offload them before I start selling the ozone layer on ebay next.
Those of us that have been around since the dawn of the computer age know full well AV companies are responsible for many generations of viruses to peddle their products with fear mongering. Many of these companies have been caught numerous times but the suckers keep on giving them money.
Personally I wouldn't trust any product associated with the Norton franchise. After what what they did with Disk Doctor and many thousands of people lost their data to their shoddy tool I'd never use this product or any other even if it was given away.
ClamAV is a good free tool if you really even need to care about winblows viruses being passed along accidentally. I couldn't care less if I did pass along any winblows viruses to my winblows clients. They gave it to me in the first place and they can have it back.
On mywot forums, many Windows users label Norton as "malware" due to fact they need a special de-installer to remove it and it slows down their machine. ClamAxv is a better way to detect windows virus, IMHO.
That special "uninstaller" is made by Symantec to remove their own product. Be that as it may, Norton and McAfee are generally the firs two pieces of software I remove off a client's computer... even before the malware... that's about how useless Norton is. If Norton can't even do its job on Windows... then it certainly isn't helping Mac users.
Uses to many resources, slows my iMac down and gets in the way. I have removed it from my 5740 iMac running Mac OS X 10.6.6. 2.93 GHz Intel Core i7.
On the positive side Symantec refunded my money without question and was very understanding.
I don't like to bag Symantec as I have used their products for years, but this version of Norton's was not up to scratch and unlike their other products. If Symantec fix Norton's I will purchase it again and give it another try.
Argghhh. Annoyingly reports Windows viruses in Java caches as viruses even after Java cleared the cache. This results in an unhelpful alert that the file could not be cleaned.
Well I got this for free as part of the whole Norton Security package from Comcast/Xfinity. I haven't used any Norton products, or antivirus software for that matter, in a very long time (since the dawn of OS X). But I have been freelancing at Sony Music, and they use it, so I figured what the heck; I'll give it a whirl.
So far it works fine. Just for fun I saved one of those zip attachments that I got on some junk mail that's supposed to be from UPS, and it detected the virus right away and removed it from the file.
The only downside is if you have it regularly scanning you hard drive, the "Norton Missed Tasks" background app eats up CPU cycles, so I turned that feature off and only have it scan my downloads folder.
I'm not expecting any viruses, but so far it has not messed up my Mac in the least. If I didn't know it was installed, I wouldn't know. It's very unobtrusive.
@Wizard2; it's easy to uninstall, it didn't write files all over the place, and we aren't using PCs, so maybe you are thinking of Windoze?
@Mistere, I didn't install any software that came on a CD from my ISP. I also didn't have them set up my connection. I have a wireless network here with four Macs, some printers and so on. I do this for a living, so I know how to do it. :)
What I said was Comcast offered this package, and since they were using it at Sony Music, I figured I'd give it a try. It works perfectly, and even helped my wife when she stumbled upon a fraudulent website when she was looking to order something.
Have you ever tried removing this stuff from a computer?
It's a world of hurt -- miss just one of hundreds and hundreds
of files and prefs it seeds throughout your harddrive -- and
the bugger re-replicates itself. It's baaaack like a movie zombie.
Most viruses and malware on Mac OS X require admin user approval
before they install or active.
The solution is simple - be vigilant and careful. NAV at best is an
expensive, messy, buggy lesson. At worst, it will damage your PC.
Really, you could not figure out how to remove it? There is a "Remove NAV" tool installed along with the program, and if you already removed that manually a quick search of their web site shows you can download the uninstaller at ftp://ftp.symantec.com/misc/tools/mactools/RemoveSymantecMacFiles.zip
I had some trouble right after updating to Snow Leopard and I got an email reply, and a call back to assist me. They were professional and knowledgable. NAV did not waste a lot of system resources or give a lot of false positives.
I agree with Megavolt17 and have nothing additional to add because Megavolt17 provided everything that I'd want to see concerning NAV. It is very easy to uninstall if you do not want it anymore.
It's quite obvious Megavolt17 and Paulsrandall are as expert with software as my dog is uploading videos to YouTube.
That so called uninstaller is passable but misses dozens of files you need to manually remove. Provided you even know where to look.
Want proof? Use an Uninstaller tool to monitor the installer and then use the installer. Now count on all your fingers and toes or until you run out of digits how many files were left behind.
I use both ClamXav and Norton AntiVirus 11 for manual scanning under Leopard. I got NAV for free from my cable internet provider (it was part of Norton Internet Security 4).
One thing I notice is that ClamXav seems to detect email viruses that NAV completely misses. Can someone clarify whether the signatures in NAV for Mac are OS X specific, and do not include Windows viruses? Do you need to purchase the "dual protection" version of NAV in order to get Windows virus signatures included in your scanning?
Is it possible that ClamXav is giving me false positives, or have a missed a configuration setting for NAV?
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Norton AntiVirus Definitions are the latest anti-virus detection files. The installer will automatically update Norton AntiVirus virus definitions and engine files to detect and repair the most recently discovered Macintosh viruses. This file is a self-extracting archive which contains the Norton AntiVirus Virus Definitions Installer. Once downloaded and expanded on your hard drive, simply double-click on the Installer and the appropriate files will be installed on your computer.
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+62
Fredash reviewed on 07 Nov 2011
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+132
Davidravenmoon reviewed on 11 Jul 2011
+2
+82
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+18
+15
Those of us that have been around since the dawn of the computer age know full well AV companies are responsible for many generations of viruses to peddle their products with fear mongering. Many of these companies have been caught numerous times but the suckers keep on giving them money.
Personally I wouldn't trust any product associated with the Norton franchise. After what what they did with Disk Doctor and many thousands of people lost their data to their shoddy tool I'd never use this product or any other even if it was given away.
ClamAV is a good free tool if you really even need to care about winblows viruses being passed along accidentally. I couldn't care less if I did pass along any winblows viruses to my winblows clients. They gave it to me in the first place and they can have it back.
-2
+1
Wayne Welsh reviewed on 10 May 2011
+1
+2
+148
Mistere reviewed on 07 May 2011
+1
+10
+8
+59
+3
+3
Dvedmunds reviewed on 28 Feb 2011
On the positive side Symantec refunded my money without question and was very understanding.
I don't like to bag Symantec as I have used their products for years, but this version of Norton's was not up to scratch and unlike their other products. If Symantec fix Norton's I will purchase it again and give it another try.
+3
+73
Pony reviewed on 25 Jan 2011
+2
+683
-1
+132
Davidravenmoon reviewed on 04 Jan 2011
So far it works fine. Just for fun I saved one of those zip attachments that I got on some junk mail that's supposed to be from UPS, and it detected the virus right away and removed it from the file.
The only downside is if you have it regularly scanning you hard drive, the "Norton Missed Tasks" background app eats up CPU cycles, so I turned that feature off and only have it scan my downloads folder.
I'm not expecting any viruses, but so far it has not messed up my Mac in the least. If I didn't know it was installed, I wouldn't know. It's very unobtrusive.
@Wizard2; it's easy to uninstall, it didn't write files all over the place, and we aren't using PCs, so maybe you are thinking of Windoze?
+3
+148
Configure your connection manually and avoid the bloatware.
+2
+132
What I said was Comcast offered this package, and since they were using it at Sony Music, I figured I'd give it a try. It works perfectly, and even helped my wife when she stumbled upon a fraudulent website when she was looking to order something.
+1
+148
+9
+30
Have you ever tried removing this stuff from a computer?
It's a world of hurt -- miss just one of hundreds and hundreds
of files and prefs it seeds throughout your harddrive -- and
the bugger re-replicates itself. It's baaaack like a movie zombie.
Most viruses and malware on Mac OS X require admin user approval
before they install or active.
The solution is simple - be vigilant and careful. NAV at best is an
expensive, messy, buggy lesson. At worst, it will damage your PC.
+2
+10
I had some trouble right after updating to Snow Leopard and I got an email reply, and a call back to assist me. They were professional and knowledgable. NAV did not waste a lot of system resources or give a lot of false positives.
+1
+5
+15
That so called uninstaller is passable but misses dozens of files you need to manually remove. Provided you even know where to look.
Want proof? Use an Uninstaller tool to monitor the installer and then use the installer. Now count on all your fingers and toes or until you run out of digits how many files were left behind.
+2
+480
One thing I notice is that ClamXav seems to detect email viruses that NAV completely misses. Can someone clarify whether the signatures in NAV for Mac are OS X specific, and do not include Windows viruses? Do you need to purchase the "dual protection" version of NAV in order to get Windows virus signatures included in your scanning?
Is it possible that ClamXav is giving me false positives, or have a missed a configuration setting for NAV?
+17
Priosantos-Jan rated on 14 Oct 2011
+82
@timi rated on 06 Oct 2011
+82
@timi rated on 27 Sep 2011
dbeenknarusk rated on 15 Aug 2011
+132
Davidravenmoon rated on 09 Jun 2011
+72
greatwave rated on 14 Jan 2011